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Deer Repelling Strategies That Work

I  wrote this article in 2012 about my old garden.  I have included the original article here with additions in italics about what I have learned since and what I am doing at my new garden.

Like people, deer love the new growth plants put out in spring.  Unlike us, they eat the foliage instead of admiring it, bringing howls of dismay from gardeners who just spent a lot of money on the plants at the garden center.

I put hair and soap around my plants, ground up garlic and hot peppers and turned them into a slurry to cover the leaves of the plants with a disgusting substance, and even attempted to shoot at the deer with a BB gun.  (Sometimes the whizzing BB startled them away).  I even ran out of the house screaming at them.  The deer were quite unfazed most of the time.  Finally, we gave up and installed an electric fence.

We use three strands of wire on metal posts, and we have a gate that folds back unobtrusively into the woods where the fence crosses the driveway.  Electric fences are easy to install and to maintain, as long as you buy a T-post driver to get the metal posts in the ground. 

Consider driving the posts your workout for a couple of days; it’s great for upper-arm strength. After you install the t-posts, you can use the tool to drive garden stakes.

Stores like Tractor Supply sell the necessary supplies.  Electric fences are not dangerous if properly installed, and they give a harmless, although unpleasant, shock.  

The deer fence worked for a time, but then the deer learned to jump over the three strands of fence as though it wasn’t even there.  At my new home, I have not put up any fencing around the garden, even though my home sits in the middle of hundreds of acres of woods.  I am not entirely certain why the deer avoid my home. The neighbor’s dogs probably help keep them away, and perhaps the disruption of the land-clearing and house construction process made them divert their paths.

At my old home, I had a permanent fence, six feet tall, surrounding the perimeter of the vegetable garden. I never had any deer intrusion. At the new garden, if and when deer become a problem, I will not install a permanent fence because of the expense and trouble involved in constructing it, and because the permanent fence encourages weed problems.

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Permanent fence around the vegetable garden at my old home in the winter, when the weeds weren’t so bad.

If I need a fence at the new home, I will use two electric fences, one inside the other. Instructing you on building a deer fence is beyond the scope of this article, but the basic idea is this: deer don’t like to be trapped between fences, so if you build two fences far enough apart that they can’t clear them both in one jump, but close enough together so they can’t jump over one and then regain their energy for another jump, they won’t try jumping at all. For more information, visit this website for fence- building directions.

If you have close neighbors who might object to the electrification of your property, try commercially produced deer repellents. Deer Scram Professional Grade is the most effective product I have found.  It is a granular substance, containing dried deer blood, pepper, garlic, and cloves. 

Motion-Activated Sprinklers  scare the deer away, too and are actually one of my favorite deterrents that I will probably impelement at the new home before I build a fence.  I have had mine for many years, but I couldn’t use them at the old house because I would have had to have hoses stretching across the driveway permanently to operate them.    They are also useful for keeping unwary guests out of your house, cats from using the garden as a litterbox, or even chickens away from your newly sprouted seedlings.

At my new home, I have solar powered flashing red lights that fortify my garden against the deer.  This may not be a solution for people with close neighbors, as they would be irritating in close quarters, but in the country they are not bothersome and seem to be effective.  I also have these lights which are not nearly as obnoxious.  I do think the large light is more effective, though.

Another way to minimize deer damage is to compose your garden of plants deer dislike, although they will eat almost anything if they are hungry enough.  Deer usually dislike strange tastes and textures, with the exception of roses, which they love: a few thorn pricks seem to be worth the taste.

Herbs, mints, and their relatives have unusual tastes and smells.  Deer do not usually like mints, but be careful with them because they can become invasive.  Plant them in a pot sunk in the ground to contain their roots. 

Upright rosemary makes a great small evergreen shrub for hot, dry places and I have never known them to eat it.  Deer avoid the mint relatives Agastache and salvia.  They don’t usually eat foxgloves, larkspur, or coneflowers.  

For spring bulbs, plant daffodils instead of tulips, daffodils do better here anyway.  Deer avoid hollies, boxwood, and loropetalum.  They also dislike conifers.

Some of the deer’s favorite plants are azaleas, roses,camellias, hydrangeas, Indian hawthorns, Hostas, pansies, and tulips.  Sometimes you can hide these favorite plants among or behind less favored plants; plant your tulips and pansies among some mint and rosemary plants.

Deer love roses

Plant favorite plants close to the house instead of at the edge of the woods; deer generally do not venture close to the house, unless there is a lot of “deer pressure,” which means that there are a lot of hungry deer and not much food. Deer have been known to eat tomatoes out of potted plants on people’s porches.

Don’t even try to plant a vegetable garden in deer country without protection in the form of a fence; deer love beans, peas, and lettuce, and they have been known to watch the tomatoes ripening, just as you do, and to pluck the one you were planning to harvest the next day from the vine during the night.

Before you purchase plants, find out whether or not you have deer; your neighbors will know if you haven’t seen any.   In the Blythewood area, if you have any woods nearby, you probably have deer. 

Garden centers, books like “The New Southern Living Garden Book” and online sites like bluestoneperennials.com offer lists of plants that deer dislike. Plan ahead to purchase plants deer dislike to save yourself the pain of walking out to admire your garden to find all the blossoms stripped from your roses and your shrubs defoliated.    

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Plant Bulbs of Spring-Blooming Flowers Now

Each spring, I look forward to the arrival of the flowers
that emerge from bulbs I have nearly forgotten while the earth covers them for
more than six months out of the year.  After
the flowers bloom, I leave the messy foliage to grow, because that is the way
the bulb obtains nutrients for next year’s flowers, until the foliage melts
into the soil and the exuberance of the summer garden covers the area.
I enjoy driving country roads in the spring and seeing the
clumps of bulbs marking the sites of long-rotted houses.  I imagine a farm wife stepping out the door
one fall day to plant them with apron pockets full of bulbs a friend or
relative gave her, for the farm wife in my imagination would not have enough
extra money to spend it on something as frivolous as flowers.
She kneels in the soil, digs a spot for the bulbs, and tucks
them beneath the soil.  In spring, she
awaits their green shoots as they push through the soil, and admonishes her
many children to stay out of the flowerbed. 
However far they may travel from home as adults, the scent and sight of
those sorts of flowers forever remind her children of spring in their mother’s
garden.
One of my babies is puzzled by this flower as we enjoy the spring bulbs
Over the years, the bulbs multiply. While the bulbs are
dormant, in the summer and early fall, she digs the bulbs and passes along the
bulbs to some other wife, or she sends her newly married daughters or
daughters-in-law with bulbs to decorate their gardens.  Depending on the bulb, she might even decide
that that she has more than she knows what to do with, so she digs bulbs and
tosses them over the fence into the cow pasture, where they put out roots,
grow, and bloom.
My grandmother tossed some bulbs over the fence into the cow
pasture many years before I was born, because she needed them out of her garden
and had no one else to give them to, and there they grew and bloomed.  We call them “Butter and Eggs” and the
ruffled blooms are tinged with green.  I
dug some bulbs out of the cow pasture and brought them home to my garden.
Bulbs decorate the winter garden.  The white plastic protected the winter vegetables, and it must be a warm day because the lid on the cold frame is open at the rear center of the photo.
My mother has beautiful white daffodils by the back door,
and some more tiny yellow ones by the basement steps.  I have helped myself to those bulbs, and I wrestled
a hole in the hard clay at my house to put in the bulbs.  Now my bulbs need thinning, and I will pass
bulbs along to someone, or I’ll expand my plantings of
bulbs.

Daffodils turn towards the sun, and unfortunately for the situation of this flowerbed, that means they turn away from the   viewer of the flowerbed

I have planted daffodils throughout my woods, and in early spring,
the woods are speckled with spots of yellow and white flowers.  If you want daffodils, obtain some from a
friend or buy some at the garden center. 
Daffodils are reliably perennial, or come back every year, here.  Deer do not usually eat them, and so they are
the perfect bulb to plant nearly anywhere in full sun.

Another baby thinks daffodils might be tasty (don’t worry, I didn’t let her munch down)

Tulips are beautiful, but they do not reliably come back
here because our winters are not cold enough to give them the winter chill they
need to prosper.  I plant them anyway,
and encourage them to bloom by either putting them in the refrigerator, inside
a paper bag, away from ripening fruit for about six week before I plant them, or
by planting them in a container outside where they get cold temperatures
without the insulating effects of the earth. 
Although the aforementioned farmwife would think me extravagantly
wasteful, I usually treat them as annuals, and I pull them out and discard them
when they have finished blooming.