dj1701
Veteran Member
The deer that make it through the hail of bullets and arrows will have to face these tasty tadpoles.
wirelessdeerfence.com
I'm more familiar with the wireless fences for dogs, so have to ask: how did you get the collars on the raccoons?I bought a set a few years back. They didn't stop the deer or raccoons. I'm guessing just not a big enough zap
It's scented to attract the deer. The deer licks it or touches its nose to it and gets zapped. Then the deer learns to associate the scent with zap so goes to the other side of the tree and eats you apples over there.I didn't view the clip. However - what keeps an animal from just stepping around the unit. Rather like a deer jumping over a six foot high electric fence.
I live in a very deer dense area of NY. I have tried many things, some were good others not so much.@ning, that video is priceless. That it is on the company's website is just ROTFLOL.
Others here I believe have put bait on their electric fence/netting to teach avoidance.
@dj1701 I don't see how those units are going to be effective. They are too short for one, and not close enough for another. As the video shows, the devices seem to be great training tools to teach deer how to leap obstacles.
Getting deer to go elsewhere depends, I think, a lot on their motivation. If there isn't much else to eat, it can take a lot to deter them, but if there is a lot to eat, it doesn't take much.
We use 5' high electric netting that has always worked for us against deer, but we have dogs that aren't wild about deer, so there is certainly other deterrents at work here. Plus, of course, the fact that mountain lions regularly pick off deer near the house.
All the best,
Peter