the correct tool would be a reciprocating saw with a wrecking blade.....
which usually means you wreck something else, which makes the job more complicated.....
Yeah, but those blade usually don't like being banged head on to a wall...the correct tool would be a reciprocating saw with a wrecking blade.....
which usually means you wreck something else, which makes the job more complicated.....
Yeah, but those blade usually don't like being banged head on to a wall...
I had these under my shed and I even called animal control who told me they don’t trap them or anything since they just come back.Suggestions on DIY groundhog removal? Found this recent burrow behind my garage
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I tried everything a few years ago. Cat litter, cat hair, human pee, store bought fox or coyote urine powder. All temporary. Final thing that kept it in my neighbors yard was full strength ammonia down the hole. I think the neighbor finally went with full lethal solution.Suggestions on DIY groundhog removal? Found this recent burrow behind my garage
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Suggestions on DIY groundhog removal? Found this recent burrow behind my garage
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That's what I always do. Medium sized havaheart trap the relocate. I've found them to be more aggressive than raccoons so cover the cage and use gloves when releasing.Another will not move in if the hole is properly filled with 3/4" and dry pour some cement.
Trap it - they like peanut butter on bread. Drop off in Union. Preferably in the strip between rt 22.
Dumb question but is there an actual problem that the groundhog presents?
Animal control told my neighbor that groundhogs act normal when they have rabies. My dog likes to chase them around the yard, so I may try evicting them from under my shed. I think there's a family of five under there.Dumb question but is there an actual problem that the groundhog presents?
Fair point. Mine were digging under my garden fence and feasting on my sweat labor.Dumb question but is there an actual problem that the groundhog presents?
That is the only thing that worked for me as well.full strength ammonia down the hole.
the last time they made themselves a home under my shed and the female had babies, they used the joists as a source of wood shavings and it wasnt until my shed started to shift off the deck platform and the doors wouldn't open or close properly I realized what was going on. I had to empty the shed, pull up the plywood floor, replace/sister the joists, relevel the shed and lay down new plywood. I took that opportunity to backfill most of the space between the joists with bags of cheap landscape rock i found on clearance.Dumb question but is there an actual problem that the groundhog presents?
it took a few rounds