gemee
Hero Member
No matter WHAT the law is,..relocate. Live and let live.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If any coon mess with my berries, I'd kill them too"Probably" Now there's a good word-yet the facts show that there are 4 other residences within 500 ft of that civic address.
Some "farms are 50 acres or more" yet the google backs up your claim of "Woods and more woods! No congestion, no plats, no stores, nothing but woods!"
(Must be tree farming)
Looking at the you live in a place that basically everyone is close proximity (217 per sq mile)
(My area is 83 per sq mile, and we say it's crowded)
So basically you live in a high density rural town environment, you only have 2 traffic lights.
(Yet I have to drive 20/30/45 minutes to find one)
It's all perspective on what is rural living-or the new world of having a lot that backs onto conservation area. Meaning trees and not another yard.
But farms Tim is a stretch as if there were farms nobody would be having the speed dial at a finger's touch.
I was visiting a permission yesterday over yonder (900 acre) came up on the couple while they were doing some fencing.
Great meet up, weather, timing for the haying.
Then bang.
"Sounded like a .22-yup-probably a coon-yup."
"We see them walking across the fields-but none in the barn lately"
"Oh we take care of them real quick-make a mess of the feed"
This is rural living a shot is of concerning as a fart-nobody really pays no mind.
I guess folks just mind their own business and don't have the speed dial mentality.
When I get the coon messing with my berries-guaranteed it's dead and buried.
There gets to the point when costs of fencing, electric fencing, and other critter control just doesn't do it-then it's the extermination route.If any coon mess with my berries, I'd kill them too
Whether you call them pigeons or rock doves, these birds are not a welcome resident of any barn. Their soft cooing sound may be soothing, but their perching habits in the rafters of barns above hay lofts guarantees you’ll have soiled hay. It’s amazing how quickly bird poop can build up once a few pigeons move in. Once hay is soiled with pigeon poop, it won’t be good to feed to your horse. Pigeon poop soiled food can carry salmonella and other harmful protozoa. Starlings too, shouldn’t be welcomed in your stable either. These birds may carry WNV. Pigeons do not cause pigeon fever in horses.a lot of people just want to make everyone else think there know it all's. If they had horses that they loved would they take a chance on Letting coons or Opossums pee and poop all over your hay. There droppings can cause death to your horses. Also TELLING SOMEONE to BREAK the LAW IS WRONG !!!
LandSeig any animal that eats or drinks it will dieI heard from a friend the other day that you can mix some fly bait in a half can of soda and it leave it by your feeder, it will wipe out the coons and possums without hurting the other animals. I don’t like to use poison to much but that’s all you can do sometimes.
Breaking news for your misinformed friend.I heard from a friend the other day that you can mix some fly bait in a half can of soda and it leave it by your feeder, it will wipe out the coons and possums without hurting the other animals. I don’t like to use poison to much but that’s all you can do sometimes.
Pepperj This is a great post thank youBreaking news for your misinformed friend.
It will kill or sicken every other animal that feeds on that carrion.
They restrict the sale of fly bait here now for that very simple reason-it keeps killing.
In 2010, a bald eagle in the Upper Peninsula was poisoned to death after feeding on a deer carcass that was treated with methomyl fly bait. MDARD’s investigation was not able to positively identify the person that misused the fly bait. Investigators suspect the treated deer carcass was intended to kill wolves.
In 2010, MDARD conducted an undercover investigation at more than 40 agricultural pesticide retailers. MDARD found more than 25% of the stores recommended the misuse of methomyl fly bait to control nuisance animals such as opossums and raccoons.
Dizzy your post is ALSO FANTASTIC Thank you !1Poison is always bad. Never, ever use poison to kill/control a mammal, including mice and rats.
As Pepper pointed out.."It will kill or sicken every other animal that feeds on that carrion."
So, you kill a mouse...and the mouse kills a cat that eats it, and then it kills an eagle or hawk that feeds on the cat. Not to mention the suffering all of those critters had to endure before they finally died.
If your only option is to kill it, then do so with expediency. Critters shouldn't have to suffer just for being hungry and chasing after an easy meal.