OH DEAR,NOT HORSE MANURE!
Nature's deer repellent, rhubarb in a basket and the
perfect milk paint.
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COUNTRY LORE
by Joyce Tomanek
Here in the Southeast, we've never seen so
many deer. Reports on television and in newspapers from
many parts of the country report a widespread problem with
deer invading even city yards and eating expensive
plantings. I've found a simple, chemical free and
inexpensive way to keep them from devouring my gardens and
shrubbery.
Through the years, I've observed the feeding habits of cows
and horses in our pastures and learned some basics. Cows
will not graze where other cows have deposited their
droppings. Horses, on the other hand, will eat where there
is cow dung, but they won't eat grass in an area
contaminated by horse manure. Interestingly, deer join
horses in the pastures and seem to have the same eating
habits, but I can never get close enough to them to see
where they feed and where they don't.
So it happened that six years ago, when a new crop of
asparagus emerged in my garden, the deer devoured it as
quickly as it came up. I didn't know what to do. I put up
an electric fence and it helped some, but the wiser
critters soon jumped it and helped themselves. So one day,
I sprinkled horse manure on part of the asparagus bed and
left the other part of the bed alone. The next morning
there was plenty of asparagus still sprouting from the
manure covered area, but every shoot was eaten where there
was no manure. Was it a coincidence, or did the deer just
prefer the asparagus without manure? To find out, I covered
the rest of the asparagus bed with horse manure and had no
further problem with deer eating it that entire spring.
Apparently deer, like horses, will not feed where there's
horse manure. Since this discovery, I've routinely applied
horse manure to my asparagus each spring and there hasn't
been a deer problem yet.