• Responding to email notices you receive.
    **************************************************
    In short, DON'T! Email notices are to ONLY alert you of a reply to your private message or your ad on this site. Replying to the email just wastes your time as it goes NOWHERE, and probably pisses off the person you thought you replied to when they think you just ignored them. So instead of complaining to me about your messages not being replied to from this site via email, please READ that email notice that plainly states what you need to do in order to reply to who you are trying to converse with.

  • IMPORTANT! PLEASE READ!! About the Google Adsense ads being displayed

    =====================
    Posted 08/15/2025
    =====================


    Yeah, I know. They are a pain in the butt. But they pay the bills to keep my server running. Just a fact of life, I am afraid.

    Want to get rid of them? Simple. Just become a Contributor level member or above and they will be gone. -> Please click HERE."

    Is that too much for me to ask of you to keep this site running? Well, sorry about that. I too wish I could get everything for free. But alas.....

    =====================
    Addendum: 01/10/2026
    =====================


    Google Adsense ad revenue for December, 2025 was just $30 over the cost of the lease for the server running this site. So, in effect, the money providing the incentive for me to continue running this site is coming SOLELY from the paid memberships and sponsorships here. Which honestly ain't much....

Squirrels.... I hate 'em!

WebSlave

It is what it is, but certainly not what it was.
Staff member
Staff
Joined
Feb 3, 2002
Messages
20,505
Reaction score
864
Points
113
Location
Crawfordville, FL
Every Spring I am plagued with squirrels that eat up the new shoots from one of my bamboo groves. Of course they pick my favorite one that is producing shoots around 6 inches in diameter (at least those that can escape the squirrel predations). I patrol the area regularly armed with my .17HMR rifle, or sometimes a 12 gauge, but they must run in, chew the hell out of whatever shoots they can find, then run off again. I've even offered a bounty of $5 a head to one of my workers when he has the time to take his 12 gauge out there. But there are apparently a WHOLE lot more of them then us out there.....

So I decided to try some different with a proactive deterrent spray. First off I tried some stuff that was supposedly designed for protecting plants from squirrels and rabbits. Called something like "Pepper Wax". So I sprayed the new shoots liberally, even spraying shoots that have previously been chewed on thinking they would be back for another bite or two. From what I could see the squirrels just thought it made the bamboo shoots more tasty and appealing. And I think the smell helped them locate the shoots more quickly as I would seek out the new ones and apply a coating of it in the hopes it would protect them. Sure didn't seem to be slowing them down any at all.

Well that didn't work.

So I went looking for something stronger. And found this stuff called "Wildfire" -> http://www.guardian-self-defense.com/wildfire.htm

Contains 18 percent of the pepper concentrate. I figured maybe coating the entire area with this stuff would be enough to persuade the varmints to stay out and leave the shoots alone. Ordered the stuff Wednesday, shipped Thursday, and arrived today.

So I took one of the spray dispensers down to the bamboo grove and just did some short bursts on a few of the shoots. I just caught the barest whiff of that stuff, and gawd damn!!!!! My nose was on fire, my eyes felt like they were being rubbed with sandpaper, and my chest started giving me some sharp pains...... I had to evacuate the area like immediately. Man, that stuff is NASTY! I think I'm going to have to use a face mask and be REAL careful with that stuff. Wind shifts the wrong way and I'd be down for the count for certain. I couldn't imaging being hit full in the face with a spray of this stuff. Just a short burst in a room would clear it in a hurry. I'm just now getting over the effects and my nose has stopped running. Like I said, NASTY stuff. If someone threatens you with pepper spray, don't think you are just dealing with something like what's in the pepper shaker on the kitchen table. This is a whole WORLD of difference!

So anyway, if the squirrels can ignore that stuff, then the bamboo is theirs. They must want it pretty badly.... Either that or I need to find a source of Claymores....... :hehehe:
 
I hates the Bushy Tailed Tree Rats.

Not as much as I hate the Armadillos tho. The dillos keep digging up our yard. If I had the time to train them, I'd have them in one spot and use it for a garden. We plan on doing some landscaping this year and I'll be beyond ticked if they trash it.
 
When I go to the park my dogs always want to take off and go get the squirrels. Is your property fenced so if you adopted a couple dogs from the local shelter they could pay their way by doing squirrel attacks during the day?

It sure seems like those varmints have been giving you a hard time for years.
 
I've got 50 acres, most of which is heavily wooded and a stream on the north end. Fencing isn't practical...

This spring there was a large owl hanging around the area, so I was hopeful he would be helping out with squirrel control. Apparently not.....
 
So I went looking for something stronger. And found this stuff called "Wildfire" -> http://www.guardian-self-defense.com/wildfire.htm

Contains 18 percent of the pepper concentrate. I figured maybe coating the entire area with this stuff would be enough to persuade the varmints to stay out and leave the shoots alone. Ordered the stuff Wednesday, shipped Thursday, and arrived today.

So I took one of the spray dispensers down to the bamboo grove and just did some short bursts on a few of the shoots. I just caught the barest whiff of that stuff, and gawd damn!!!!! My nose was on fire, my eyes felt like they were being rubbed with sandpaper, and my chest started giving me some sharp pains...... I had to evacuate the area like immediately. Man, that stuff is NASTY! I think I'm going to have to use a face mask and be REAL careful with that stuff. Wind shifts the wrong way and I'd be down for the count for certain. I couldn't imaging being hit full in the face with a spray of this stuff. Just a short burst in a room would clear it in a hurry. I'm just now getting over the effects and my nose has stopped running. Like I said, NASTY stuff. If someone threatens you with pepper spray, don't think you are just dealing with something like what's in the pepper shaker on the kitchen table. This is a whole WORLD of difference!

So anyway, if the squirrels can ignore that stuff, then the bamboo is theirs. They must want it pretty badly.... Either that or I need to find a source of Claymores....... :hehehe:

Rich, that sounds like some of the stuff I use at work! I'm interested in knowing if it works on the varmints...it definitely works on the ones I spray it on! I bought a spare can to spray on my garbage can to keep stray dogs/raccoons out of it--it works great for that. :yesnod:
 
If you're still having trouble with these critters, I'd suggest trying Sevin dust. I use it on my garden to prevent deer, squirrels, and rabbits. It certainly works! I only have to use it outside the fence though since my 1 1/2 year old labradoodle has a killing streak in her, and she's quicker than her poor victims! She honestly just wants to play with them, but rabbits and squirrels usually have heart attacks from the fright and die.
 
Richard, I've used cyan pepper on squirrels before to no effect. Let me know if that stuff works for you though, I have yet to find something that deters a squirrel. Perhaps you should get into falconry... a red-tailed hawk perched within lunging distance of those shoots will definitely keep the squirrels away!
 
I've got 50 acres, most of which is heavily wooded and a stream on the north end. Fencing isn't practical...

This spring there was a large owl hanging around the area, so I was hopeful he would be helping out with squirrel control. Apparently not.....

Cats are another option if you dont mind them. My mothers cat is a real killer. anything he can get his paws on. Birds, Mice, Rats, Moles, Snakes, Frogs, Bats, Chipmunks, and yes, Squirrels. Every morning the walk way is covered in various remains. Half of one animal, head of another, piles of intestines, a foot here, a tail there. It got me pretty desensitized.
 
Not sure which way to go with this one. My initial response was "don't you live in Florida?, I thought all those Burmese pythons were eatin all the other critters in Florida" but then I thought maybe "let a few Burmese pythons go, they'll eat the squirrels and with the tens of thousands already loose no one will notice a few more."

Either way, good luck with the squirrels.
 
Not sure which way to go with this one. My initial response was "don't you live in Florida?, I thought all those Burmese pythons were eatin all the other critters in Florida" but then I thought maybe "let a few Burmese pythons go, they'll eat the squirrels and with the tens of thousands already loose no one will notice a few more."

Either way, good luck with the squirrels.

I don't think the Burmese would survive this far north. It does get some cold nights here in the Winter months. But I did think about contacting a local guy who buys from collectors for resale to see if he could get me some HUGE local gray rat snakes to release around here during bamboo shooting season. I didn't want to do that before, because more than likely they would have shown up in the mouse building, but that isn't an issue any longer.
 
When we go to the cabin up in the mountains of Cuba, NM, we always have to chase off the squirrels. It's come to the point where we just use them to site in the guns. They're nothing but pests!
 
Squirrels are evil geniuses. I love birds and bought a squirrel proof bird feeder last year, and buy seed so the outside birds (as opposed to my pet inside birds) have food especially during the winter.

The feeder works by having a perch which will lower and close off the posrts to the seed if something too heavy like a squirrel sits on it.
So today I caught a squirrel hanging off the top and eating up the seed, defeating the squirrel proof mechanism.

I have hung the feeder off the gas lamp in the front yard (which I don't use). It is on a 6 foot high slick-painted pole. I'm waiting to see whether the squirrels will try dropping onto the feeder from the tree above, but so far they haven't and the little birds once again are eating seed from the feeder.
 
Back
Top