She always glows pink so you can disguise the fact that she's always feeling blue
My mother planted some young trees in her side yard last weekend. The overgrowth of rabbits afflicting the neighborhood has since eaten all but two. She is very upset, especially since they have also eaten her strawberries and her tomatoes, seemingly impervious to the usual safeguards. I made a temporary shelter for the leafier, less gnawed of the two survivors tonight and may return over the weekend to construct a more permanent one. Needless to say, I also spent some time yelling and driving rabbits out of the yard. They were astonishingly unafraid for something so plump and delicious.
I do not understand, if one can rent goats to clear one's lawn of poison ivy and other weeds, why it is not possible to procure foxes for similar purposes. Wanted: one vixen with plenty of hungry kits to feed. Offering: attractive side and back yard with overgrown ravine suitable for denning, gratitude and admiration of nearby humans who will maintain respectful distance, all the rabbits you can eat. Please respond by moving in at your convenience.
(I am all in favor of breeding the endangered New England cottontail back to a stable population. The invasive Eastern cottontail is eating everything my mother plants and I think about Hasenpfeffer.)
I do not understand, if one can rent goats to clear one's lawn of poison ivy and other weeds, why it is not possible to procure foxes for similar purposes. Wanted: one vixen with plenty of hungry kits to feed. Offering: attractive side and back yard with overgrown ravine suitable for denning, gratitude and admiration of nearby humans who will maintain respectful distance, all the rabbits you can eat. Please respond by moving in at your convenience.
(I am all in favor of breeding the endangered New England cottontail back to a stable population. The invasive Eastern cottontail is eating everything my mother plants and I think about Hasenpfeffer.)

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We fenced in my dogwood for a couple of years to save her; we may have to do the same with my mother's garden. It just didn't used to be necessary!
I approve of your rent-a-fox idea!
I wish I knew who to pitch it to! Drumlin Farm?
I don't suppose you notice a dearth of tulips in the spring, where you are?
Not in my mother's yard! Those come up fine. (I am learning a lot about squirrels in this thread.)
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Around here, squirrels regularly eat tulip buds and blossoms. You can tell it's rabbits instead if they eat right down to the ground instead of "just" nipping off the blossoms or buds and devouring them.
Squirrels also like to take a single bite out of a tomato. I had read that they only did this out of thirst and that providing water would prevent it. Providing water reduces the incidence, but some squirrels must have acquired a taste for tomato juice.
P.
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I would also accept more hawks.