Whats the best deer repellent

Gilfman

Well-Known Member
ok i've poured, sprayed, and hung rags with my piss all around my plot and i shaved my head and spread it all around .. didnt work.. next day.. tragedy struck .. ate my babies!! but Repels-all works .. spray that shit on your plants and they dont eat it .. wouldnt spray in flowering .. but veg yes.. also will be using moth balls this year and liquid fence... cause im in a heavy population of deer.. i actually saw about 30-40 today just going to my new spot ... so i basically need a fence with proxy mines everywhere to deter deer around here..
 

GrowingGreenGiant

Well-Known Member
all i have to say about the subject is... FUCK DEER, RUNNY BABBITS, SQUIRRELS, AND ALL OTHER GANJA GRAZING ORGANISMS, other than people of course
 

GrowingGreenGiant

Well-Known Member
true, so if your are using the buried fish method for early nutes make sure your bury your fish at least a foot beneath the surface of the soil
 

jordisgarden

Well-Known Member
predator piss is the best stuff you can get. wolf or ,mountain lion pee. also the smell of humans keeps em away. toss a shirt of yours a few of em around the grow. make em sweaty stinky ones. blow smoke on em. it will keep them away

if your using dead fish in the dirt, animals will i repeat WILL dig your shit up to get to the fish. skunks cyotes , all sorts of shit , theyll do some damage too. good luck homie

the only prob ive had with animals is skunks and squirles. my cat takes care of those buggers
this one was coming in my cellar window and topping plants on me. killed a couple. then katyusha my cat got to it. they dont come around much any more but i will not look forward to the summer. oh well im just glad my cat is the beast.
 

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2cimdma

Well-Known Member
Ah ha!! Oddly enough I found a solar power electric fence in my barn. I think I'll go with that. We have wild boar and other crazy shit too.
 

Brick Top

New Member
the con of predator urine is eventually the deer lose their fear of it and will procede to eat your children

That is why you do not rely on only one thing and instead use multiple things. Predator urine, try one type and then switch to another type and so on, human urine, wear an old tee shirt for several really hot days and get it nice and stinky and cut or tear it into strips and hang it from nearby bushes, an old pair of socks that you wear several days in a row or so will work well too. Start with one and then add another and then add another. You just have to keep giving them something different to be concerned about.


Once plants reach a certain size normally deer will lose interest in them. They mainly like seedlings and not bushes so if you can protect them while young you have much less to worry about later.
 

pillarize

Well-Known Member
I would kill the son of a bitch...gut him close to the plants ...eat the meat and let the coyotes finish off whats left...oh yea after a biuld a fence around my plants.
 

ProPlayer420

Well-Known Member
This from Yard & Garden
This is the link if you want more info: http://www.extension.umn.edu/projects/yardandgarden/ygbriefs/h462deer-coping.html

REPELLENTS
Two basic types of deer repellents are available. Contact repellents are applied to the plants, causing them to taste bad. Area repellents are placed in the problem area and repel due to their foul odor.

  • A study conducted in Connecticut tested six repellents. Generally, repellents were more effective on less preferred plants. Here are the findings:
  • Big Game Repellent also known as Deer Away, made from putrescent (rotten) whole egg solids was 46% effective.
  • Hinder, made from ammonium soaps of higher fatty acids was 43% effective.
  • Thiram, a bitter tasting fungicide, now commonly used in repellents, was 43% effective.
  • Mesh bags of human hair, collected from hair styling shops, was found to be 34% effective. (Hair should be dirty, not collected after a shampoo.)
  • Magic Circle deer repellent, a bone tar oil which was soaked into 10 by 30 cm. burlap pieces, was 18% effective.
  • Miller Hot Sauce, containing capsicum, an extract of hot peppers, was 15% effective.
No scientific studies have been made of the following two techniques, but they are offered for the reader's consideration. Perhaps they're worth a try!
  1. Some people have had success with tying pieces of deodorant soap on the branches of trees. A large bar is cut into about six pieces and each piece is placed in a mesh bag and tied to the branches. Non-deodorant soap does not seem to work as well.
  2. Two eggs and a cup or two of cold water mixed in a high speed blender, added to a gallon of water and sprayed on the foliage has been effective in some cases. This egg mixture does not wash off the foliage easily but re-application two or three times a season may be needed. (For a larger quantity, blend a dozen eggs into 5 gallons of water.) This mix should be used a distance from the residence as it has an unpleasant odor. It is also thought to repel rabbits.
 

Gilfman

Well-Known Member
This from Yard & Garden
This is the link if you want more info: http://www.extension.umn.edu/projects/yardandgarden/ygbriefs/h462deer-coping.html

REPELLENTS
Two basic types of deer repellents are available. Contact repellents are applied to the plants, causing them to taste bad. Area repellents are placed in the problem area and repel due to their foul odor.

  • A study conducted in Connecticut tested six repellents. Generally, repellents were more effective on less preferred plants. Here are the findings:
  • Big Game Repellent also known as Deer Away, made from putrescent (rotten) whole egg solids was 46% effective.
  • Hinder, made from ammonium soaps of higher fatty acids was 43% effective.
  • Thiram, a bitter tasting fungicide, now commonly used in repellents, was 43% effective.
  • Mesh bags of human hair, collected from hair styling shops, was found to be 34% effective. (Hair should be dirty, not collected after a shampoo.)
  • Magic Circle deer repellent, a bone tar oil which was soaked into 10 by 30 cm. burlap pieces, was 18% effective.
  • Miller Hot Sauce, containing capsicum, an extract of hot peppers, was 15% effective.
No scientific studies have been made of the following two techniques, but they are offered for the reader's consideration. Perhaps they're worth a try!
  1. Some people have had success with tying pieces of deodorant soap on the branches of trees. A large bar is cut into about six pieces and each piece is placed in a mesh bag and tied to the branches. Non-deodorant soap does not seem to work as well.
  2. Two eggs and a cup or two of cold water mixed in a high speed blender, added to a gallon of water and sprayed on the foliage has been effective in some cases. This egg mixture does not wash off the foliage easily but re-application two or three times a season may be needed. (For a larger quantity, blend a dozen eggs into 5 gallons of water.) This mix should be used a distance from the residence as it has an unpleasant odor. It is also thought to repel rabbits.
contact ones dont make it taste bad .. i used it last year and its great.. dont spray on buds duh
 
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