Got rats

piatch

Well-Known Member
I went to water yesterday and the end of one branch was nibbled off. I looked around and there were two or three more tops missing. I show up today and HALF THE PLANT IS GONE. Litteraly half the fucking plant! SHHHITTT!!!! I put bone meal as a top dress about a week ago and think that is attracting the varmints. I'm sure its rats. There are droppings all around and I see them in the surrounding shrubs all the time. Now this is a guerilla grow up in the local hills so I can't be there as often as I'd like. I want to go buy 50lbs of cyanide and put it everywhere on the hill have a fucking rat genocide up there. "Eat my baby girl motherfucker?" Anyone have any suggestions? Iv'e got four more plants up there and dont want to lose anymore than I have already. But I would prefer not to use any serious poisons because there are a lot of HAWKS and other predatory birds flyin about, and don't want them eating tainted rat if I can avoid it. Please help! My babies are being eaten alive.
 

NewGrowth

Well-Known Member
Rats are smart dude. You could try some garlic cayenne spray like I use for deer and see if they decide to stop nibbling on your buds but I think if they really want to get high ther is not much you can do to stop em :lol:
 

piatch

Well-Known Member
I put out some traps with peanut butter bait yesturday and sprinkled some of the coyote piss pellets for the bunnies. I'm also looking at some poison that doesn't hurt predators that may eat the dead rats. Thanks for the suggestions, maybe get one of those owls, couldn't hurt I guess.
 

bmoore919

Active Member
the people next door have a citris tree 4 feet from the chain link fence that separates our yards and is one side of my garden fence.i just found out it has fruit rats.not sure if thats the same that ur dealing with but i planted stuff they would eat instead of the things i really wanted.i found they like pumpkin and they really love sweet corn.it will fatten them up for the hawks to.
 

piatch

Well-Known Member
Went up today, three traps, two dead rats. One of the traps was 30 ft. away from were I left it. All that was left was a rat skull and about 20 yellowjackets feasting on the remains. So since I put out the traps its averaged 1 big fat dead rat a day. And no more missing buds.
 

doobiedo

Well-Known Member
this may sound stupid but look around at garden shops and buy a couple of plastic owls and put them by your plants!!! see i told you that sounds stupid....
 

canadianreefer

Well-Known Member
Depending on your climate and laws around your area, maybe get some snakes (of proper predatory size) and put them around your shrubs... if you can fence them in an acre or few of land around your bushes (not sure what type of fence would work to keep snakes in, theyre pretty great escape artists) then the snakes would feed on the rats.
you'd eventually have to take the fence down though lol...
 

piatch

Well-Known Member
Funny you say that . I went to the novelty shop a couple days ago and bought a couple rubber snakes to dangle off of the pots. One is a cheesy looking halloween type the other is a more realistic looking corral/king snake (red on yellow kill a filthy rat). They are fake but the traps and the addition of some rat bars "ONE BITE" poison are serious biz, no joke!!!
 

alphabibbiddy boo boo

Well-Known Member
daaaaammmn... what a fuggin post! rats? for real? anyways, outside of unleashing the ratschwitz on this vermin, you could rig up a lil sqiurrely-cage style plant guardian... right? like on of those protective collars you see on dogs when they get neutered or spayed, but upside down, protecting each plant so theres no feasible way for them to get at the goods...

also, if you got rats, growin herb is the least of your problems... imho

:peace:

p.s. at least they're just rats, and not snitches... wahhhh waaaaahhhh
 

piatch

Well-Known Member
No, I thought about that but these are fucking olympic decathalete rats. They can jump at least 18" verticle and with a running start, long jump at least five feet. You oughta see em running through the bushes, like birds in flight. Really, really fast. And big. The first victom of the trap must have been at least a pound and a half, no shit.
A couple of major league ball players live down the street. Rats are probably gettin some anabolic roids outa the trash. Fuckin super rats. Super "dead" rats.
 

alphabibbiddy boo boo

Well-Known Member
No, I thought about that but these are fucking olympic decathalete rats. They can jump at least 18" verticle and with a running start, long jump at least five feet. You oughta see em running through the bushes, like birds in flight. Really, really fast. And big. The first victom of the trap must have been at least a pound and a half, no shit.
A couple of major league ball players live down the street. Rats are probably gettin some anabolic roids outa the trash. Fuckin super rats. Super "dead" rats.
haaaaaah damn.! thats fucking ridiculous man, do you know how they're getting in? i would say rat traps but i could see blood flying on the herb that way too... which is worse than feeding rats with it. i dont know man, good luck. try sticky pads... little cruel but damn, its not like you're stealing chron form the rats now is it?
 

LiveVibe

Well-Known Member
The chicken wire idea seems like the most cost efficient and effective method to prevent animals from chewing your plants.

Any pesticides you are not sure of and really any in general may kill the good bugs while hurting the soil plus ecology all around which could hurt your plants even more. Also they can get in the air and wind from moisture transfer onto your plants which can hurt you as well.

You could make one out of thin mesh screening with stakes that are taller than their jumps and just put it around the lower growth region of the plant. Unless those guys and gals can climb - well should be alright I would guess.

You could feed the rats something else too. Like rat food from the pet store. That should keep them from munching. You could give them leaves too. Honestly you cannot kill them all and they do have a function. Obviously they are hungry and wanting attention. Also unless you see them eating your plants then you really do not know for sure if they are the true culprit.
 
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