Re: What to do about rabbit droppings?


Beautiful, Marge!  Just beautiful.  --Janis


In a message dated 99-03-23 12:02:04 EST, Marge Talt wrote:

<<  From what I know, you're getting free fertilizer.  Rabbit droppings are
 supposed to be good fertilizer..and, I *think* they aren't hot so won't
 burn plants (somebody who knows can confirm or deny).  If you don't want to
 distribute them in the border, add them to your compost.
 
 As far as catching them, do please make certain that there aren't any nests
 full of young if you insist on trapping the adults.  Mother rabbits do not
 stay in the nest with their young, they lurk nearby and only go to the nest
 for quick feeds.  Nests are not easy to see unless you practically trip
 over them.  The mother rabbit makes a shallow excavation and lines it with
 her fur, has the babies in it and then covers the babies with her fur and
 grass, leaves and whatnot.  I don't know where you are, but chances are
 good that the first lot of baby rabbits is already in the nest for this
 year.  Baby rabbits are virtually impossible to hand raise - even the
 wildlife rehab people have trouble with them and removing the mother leaves
 them to a rather horrible death by starvation or predation.
 
 If you have one rabbit, you have more than one, and very likely more than
 2.  Rather than trapping, try cayenne pepper, Ropel, bloodmeal or some of
 the other "organic" type deterrents - predator urine might also be an
 option.  If you have cats and dogs running loose in the garden, they will
 soon convince the bunnies to move on.  Rabbit netting (metal fencing) also
 works, tho' it isn't too decorative.
 
 The Wildlife Rehabilitation Directory lets you search for rehabbers by
 state URL:
 
 http://www.cc.ndsu.nodak.edu/instruct/devold/twrid/html/index.htm
 
 If 'twere I, I'd call a rehabber first.  Animal control units generally
 dispose of what they catch.  Releasing animals in other areas is not a
 really good thing because the territory is generally taken already, leading
 to starvation, fights and death.  
 
 Mother Nature abhors a vacuum.  If a spot is suitable for a certain type of
 wildlife, they will inhabit it.  If they are removed and the conditions
 remain suitable, more will move in.  IMHO, our choices as gardeners and
 stewards of our bit of ground are to either make our patch untenable for
 the wild creatures who want to share it (thus losing the pleasure of
 watching them) or work at outwitting them so that we get to keep the plants
 we want and they get to live, too.  Getting "rid" of is really not a long
 term option as long as they are in the area.
 
 Marge Talt, zone 7 Maryland
 mtalt@clark.net
 Editor:  Gardening in Shade
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