Any other helpful tips you may have.
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by Arizona Mike » Fri Aug 17, 2007 9:57 am
"The time you spend making sure you are safe is probably the most productive time you can spend!" George Willer 
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by Dan England » Sat Aug 18, 2007 5:14 pm
A few comments on the very well written, well illustrated article by Arizona Mike on trapping gophers. They have an extensive network of tunnels, usually six to ten inches below ground surface. They may dig an extension to the surface to feed on above ground plant material although most feeding occurs on plant material below the surface. Most extensions to the surface are created to dispose of loose dirt as the tunnel is made, thus creating the mounds. By probing around the mound, maybe with a large screwdriver, the location of the tunnel can be determined. Remove the dirt and set two traps, one on either side of the upward extension, facing opposite directions. Carefully cover the hole with a flat rock, a board, roofing shingle or similar material, then cover that with dirt to block all light from the tunnel. If light penetrates into the tunnel, gophers will pile dirt there until it blocks all light. And, in the process, the traps will be covered and become inoperable. A wire, or string in Mike's pictures, should be attached to each trap with the opposite end extending above ground. The easiest and safest way to check the traps is to apply a gentle pull on the string. No gopher if it offers little resistance. If you must pull hard to move it, you have a gopher on the other end. I have caught a lot of gophers by this method. Now, if someone can tell me how to catch moles. They love our flower and vegetable gardens, probably because earthworms and grubs also love them. In several years of trapping moles, I have caught a grand total of two. Probably the two dumbest in the group or I wouldn't have gotten them. Dan
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by technova » Tue Aug 21, 2007 10:53 pm
Dan England wrote: Now, if someone can tell me how to catch moles. They love our flower and vegetable gardens, probably because earthworms and grubs also love them. In several years of trapping moles, I have caught a grand total of two. Probably the two dumbest in the group or I wouldn't have gotten them. Dan
I stick the garden hose in the tunnels and wait for them to come up.
Have a pitch fork handy. I got two this year after someone told me this.
Moles are really ugly!
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by Paul_NJ » Sun Sep 16, 2007 7:08 am
Just last week a friend told me a good way to get rid of my burrowing groundhogs is soaking unshelled peanuts in antifreeze before throwing them down their hole. Haven't tried it yet . . . anyone know if this works?
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by George Willer » Sun Sep 16, 2007 8:53 am
Paul_NJ wrote:Just last week a friend told me a good way to get rid of my burrowing groundhogs is soaking unshelled peanuts in antifreeze before throwing them down their hole. Haven't tried it yet . . . anyone know if this works?
Great solution if it works on moles. I have a bucket of old coolant and a jar of stale peanuts. I wonder if the moles will mind if the peanuts are stale?
George Willer http://gwill.netThe most affectionate creature in the world is a wet dog. Ambrose Bierce
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by Paul_NJ » Sun Sep 16, 2007 12:22 pm
George Willer wrote:Paul_NJ wrote:Just last week a friend told me a good way to get rid of my burrowing groundhogs is soaking unshelled peanuts in antifreeze before throwing them down their hole. Haven't tried it yet . . . anyone know if this works?
Great solution if it works on moles. I have a bucket of old coolant and a jar of stale peanuts. I wonder if the moles will mind if the peanuts are stale?
I imagine with the antifreeze chaser it might be like beer . . . after the first couple you don't notice the brand as much.
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by ebax » Wed Apr 30, 2008 11:05 pm
This is the best gopher getter I've ever seen. Jet was a stray dog who was dumped off at the end of our country road. She survived for several months on whatever she could catch before she adopted us. She is still a small game hunter and supplements her diet on a daily basis with gophers, moles, mice, and whatever else she can get. She has also trained our cats to hunt and they are getting to be good at it. The cats catch rodents and Jet eats them. It's a win/win situation for her.
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by george » Tue Sep 09, 2008 11:02 am
Last year I evicted a groundhog living under my woodshed by pouring a box of mothballs into his burrow; he hasn't been back this year. George
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by Yogie » Sun Mar 22, 2009 11:34 pm
I've tried all the methods on removing Moles and such. The only real way to get rid of this type of rodent is to kill out their food source. I picked up a spray mixture for the lawn that killed grubs and such and the moles are gone for good... It's been about 18 years now...  Must have been so goooood stuff.
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