Peach thief!
Once the peaches on this one tree started ripening, it didn't take long before some varmint found them and thought they were grown, watered, and cared for all for him to eat. I did get three of them, but there were a lot more of them that are now being converted to possum crap.
I'm trying a live trap with bait (bird feed block) that has worked pretty well in the past, but apparently this possum isn't interested in that bait. Perhaps this is one I have trapped before around the bird feeders and he found his way back "home" and now knows to avoid such things. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joG5_50O6s0 I really don't want to shoot this critter, but the varmint broke all of the new growth branches on this tree getting to the peaches, and I have another tree close to this one which should have the peaches ripening in another week or two. So I really can't allow this thing to be damaging both of the trees. Although it will be a while for the citrus to be ripe, we have had problems in the past with possums getting into those trees as well. I lost all of the asian pears we were growing and most of the regular pears last year to them. They are getting to be a real nuisance, it seems. Between the possums, raccoons, deer, and squirrels ravaging everything, I'm feeling like nature has turned against us here. "Loving nature" really only sounds good in theory and when you aren't living thick in the middle of it, I guess. Or I guess over time you soon learn that loving nature becomes very selective about which forms of benign nature that deserve loving. I sure as heck would hate to be a commercial farmer and have to deal with this sort of thing battling for my livelihood day in and day out. |
Good luck ridding your yard of coons and possums. I know what some of the commercial growers do, and I'm sure people would object to their methods. They used fly bait, in cans containing blue malrin mixed with coke or pepsi, and placed around their orchards. It was so potent that now the fly bait sold contains the less potent golden malrin instead. You can imagine what happens if a pet consumes the mixture.
|
Well, the trap is still out there without attracting the possum. I think the next gun show that comes to town, I may be shopping for a night vision scope for one of my varmint rifles. Hate to do it, but the possum really should have chosen door number one. Obviously he is going to be a continual nuisance concerning all of our fruit trees this year unless I get rid of him.
|
Rich, if he likes fruit so much could you purchase a really ripe peach from the store and bait the trap with that?
|
Quote:
|
get an over ripe one maybe. Not rotten but really soft. The extra pheromones coming from the fruit may attract it then and you'll be less likely to want to eat it. :p
|
When I trapped possum and skunk I used canned cat food. They loved it, and I worked 40 miles away from my home, so didn't have to worry about them coming back. My sister-in law feeds all the neighborhood cats and what they don't eat the possums finish.
|
Quote:
|
You don't have to live near nature to have possum issues. :( I see a lot of people use possum spikes but I don't know if they work. When we had a dog we had no possum issues besides finding one with a snapped neck in the yard one day. When our lovely girl passed we didn't have time for another dog and then the real possum problem began. Not only were the raccoons and possums taking our veggies, they were biting the base of the plant, killing it. We ended up putting our garden in a chain link dog run from Home Depot, the kind with chain link on the top as well. But with a large area, I suggest a dog. :) But caring for those is probably more than buying peaches from the store.
|
Quote:
Yeah, having a dog would present it's own set of problems. For instance, we have a severe yellow fly infestation right now, and I think it would be downright cruel to have a dog outside with those flying monsters all about. It would have to be hell for a dog. Having an inside dog is just out of the question. We once had a dog around here that someone dropped off and Connie sort of adopted him. Until we learned why he was probably dropped off by someone. Connie named him "Shredder" if that is any hint. Nothing, and I mean NOTHING, was safe from that dog tearing it up. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:00 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.