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30-10-2012, 12:43 PM
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kids+wife+scopes=happyman
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: sydney, australia
Posts: 4,997
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How to discourage possums raiding vegie patch and fruit trees?
Hi all,
Possums, possums, possums.
I love 'em. Really. I do.
BUT, I need to draw the line when they raid the veggie patch and the fruit trees. They are worse than ratus ratus that can be dealt with, terminally.
Fencing the veggie patch is an option, though not practical. But I don't know how to protect the fruit on trees. Any other suggestions.
I've seen the thread Getting rid of possums, but fruit trees and veggies present other chanllenges not addressed here.
Mental - and going more so...
Last edited by mental4astro; 30-10-2012 at 12:55 PM.
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30-10-2012, 01:40 PM
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I have detailed files....
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Kellyville Ridge, NSW Australia
Posts: 3,306
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Shot gun.
Simple, yet effective.
Chris
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30-10-2012, 01:43 PM
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Country living & viewing
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Armidale
Posts: 2,790
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1080
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30-10-2012, 01:53 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 4,485
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Dog
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30-10-2012, 02:22 PM
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kids+wife+scopes=happyman
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: sydney, australia
Posts: 4,997
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Screwdriverone
Shot gun.
Simple, yet effective.
Chris
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I think I'd get into a tad of trouble letting one off in Maroubra! You'd see my house on the evening news as the target of the recent drive-by-shootings
Dog - I'm a cat person, and the missus a doggie girl. No chance of compromise, so not an option, <sigh> I might change my mind if it's a Fox Terrier.
1080 - will work, but...
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30-10-2012, 02:30 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Canberra
Posts: 430
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Quote:
Originally Posted by allan gould
Dog
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Alex
Ditto on the dog.
We have one dog that regularly sits on sentry duty on our back deck waiting to see off raiding possums. This is the only way we have found to keep them away. Other methods, including shouting (they don't seem to comprehend my words?), squirting with a hose, chasing madly in frustration in the middle of the night, trying to throw a cat in the general direction, etc have surprisingly all failed. Yes, it's a dog or something more... Final.
Andrew
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30-10-2012, 02:34 PM
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Teknition
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Brisbane Australia
Posts: 1,721
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Hi Alexander,
There are a number of legal matters when dealing with possums. I can only speak for what the rules are in Qld.
I used to evict possums from houses and other properties. I'd find them making homes in roof cavities, between floors etc.
Trapping possums is not legal. However I had special permission from Parks and Wildlife. It is also not legal to relocate possums. Many people do regardless.
You will find that it is only a few possums that are doing you disharmony.
Maybe only one. It would be so easy to trap it and relocate it,but that is not legal.
If you requested permission from the authorities to relocate. They will turn you down. Advising you to mesh your garden.
Several places hired out cage traps for possums. This was not legal. So they changed the name to cage traps for cats and customers used them to relocate possums.
The reason for the law is that possums are territorial and will die prematurely when relocated. Although I had evidence to contradict this. There were some very rare and special reasons that I had to relocate possums, I found they lived quite long in their new environment. I knew exactly where they were sleeping during the day and each had its own unique distinguising marks. Like a small piece of ear missing, scars etc.
The only legal way is to place strong wire mesh over the garden. Poisoning can get you huge fines. I know of a few customers who inadvertantly put rat poison in their ceiling void to get rid of rats. They also had the resident possum in there. The rats left and died. The possum died in the void. Very bad smell.
There's also been a number of products that people have tried to repell possums. forget them. Too much effort and short term.
Hope that helps.
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30-10-2012, 02:52 PM
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Teknition
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Brisbane Australia
Posts: 1,721
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Hi Andrew,
Re  og.
Yes, dog works but only if the dog has the inclination to chase possums.
I have a smart Border Collie. Will not chase any wild life except Plovers in flight and then they must be screeching out their call.
We had a Cavalier / Poodle cross that was a serious hunter. Nothing was safe. Its a bit of hit and miss. Terriers like Foxies are generally good.
Cheers
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30-10-2012, 03:07 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Sydney
Posts: 5,244
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One of my co-workers has a mango tree that possums were destroying-tried everything and nothing worked. Then on a Google search, he found a place in Queensland selling an electronic gadget that emits a high frequency sound that humans can't hear, but animals can-including possums. You do ned a power point to plug into, and you need to aim the beam in the direction you wish to protect, but he says the possums don't go near his tree anymore.
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30-10-2012, 09:09 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Mt. Kuring-Gai
Posts: 5,999
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Baddad
Several places hired out cage traps for possums. This was not legal.
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The reason for the law is that possums are territorial and will die prematurely when relocated. Although I had evidence to contradict this.
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Hi Marty, Alex,
Further to this and rather than it just being a matter that possums are territorial is
that in the wild, tree hollows are a very scarce resource.
If a possum is denied a hollow within its ranging territory, it will almost certainly die.
It has deeper ramifications than this when one considers that more than 300 Australian
native species, including mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians use tree hollows.
Relocating a possum to a new territory may mean it ends up finding a new hollow,
but perhaps kicking out some other possum or some other species. Some of the
species that occupy hollows are in decline and some are threatened.
Possums are a protected species in NSW.
If a possum has to be evicted from a roof cavity, the humane approach is to
construct a nesting box for it which should be placed in a tree within its roaming
territory.
The advice Marty provided to screen the trees you want to protect is the best
advice.
Best Regards
Gary Kopff
Mt Kuring-Gai NSW
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30-10-2012, 09:58 PM
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Be gentle, I'm new..
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Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Newcastle,NSW
Posts: 290
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mental4astro
Mental - and going more so...
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Same here.
Every night we have possums decimating my avocado trees & when they finish hey climb our next door neighbors tree & jump onto our roof, right above our bedroom.
So every night, usually twice a night, we are woken by this almighty thump (roof is colourbond) right above our heads. 
Then they use power wires to climb onto main power pole & go to another houses from there.
I love them to death, but would prefer the visits to stop...
For a while at least...
Cheers
Arek
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31-10-2012, 12:02 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Renmark, SA
Posts: 2,993
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Just ask Doom Guy to lend you his BFG 9000.
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31-10-2012, 12:28 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 1,013
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A visit to the local Cemetery shows that they wrap some laminated film around the trunk so the possums cannot climb them. Check out the local school to see if they have a 1 metre wide laminating machine...laminate some thick paper and wrap a 2 metre length about 1 metre above the ground and use thumb tacks to secure it to the tree trunk...
This way the little darlings can't get a grip and climb up and might follow a trail of apples out of the place...
No poisons, guns, harsh language,etc
Cheers!
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31-10-2012, 11:03 AM
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Lost in Space ....
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Join Date: May 2010
Location: Auckland, NZ
Posts: 4,949
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In NZ they wrap a band of galvanised steel around tree trunks, power poles etc. Seems to work. Needs to be about 600mm wide at least so critter can't reach across.
If you run out of possums we have millions of the little pests. Over here shooting, poison, death by ray guns, automobile aiming is encouraged. You can have them all back anytime you want. Destructive little gits. Used to be a bounty on the tails at one stage. Get the 22 and strap a decent torch on and head for the orchards. I could bag 20-30 a night. Good pocket money.
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31-10-2012, 11:54 AM
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kids+wife+scopes=happyman
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: sydney, australia
Posts: 4,997
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pgc hunter
Just ask Doom Guy to lend you his BFG 9000.
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Got his number? I've seen him using it - oohhh, that's gotta hurt!
I like the idea of wrapping something around the trunks of the trees.
I now vaguely remember someone rigging up a row of copper bands around a tree trunk and attached to an electric current - something like a hybid tree electric fence. Plausible?
Brent, you can indulge in possum pie! Just think of 'em as rabbits with long bushy tails. They eat better than rabbits too.
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31-10-2012, 12:18 PM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 599
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Gotta call in Turtle Man.
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31-10-2012, 12:20 PM
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<--- Comet Hale-Bopp
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Cloudy Mackay
Posts: 6,542
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mental4astro
I now vaguely remember someone rigging up a row of copper bands around a tree trunk and attached to an electric current - something like a hybid tree electric fence. Plausible?...
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Should work. I have something similar at the door to discourage tomcats from spraying. One day a curious possum came to the door and got zapped. Unlike the cats that run away, this possum kept trying to figure out what was zapping him on the nose every time he went to sniff it. He did it 4 times before he got the message!
Dog is a very expensive option. Even for a cat, the lifetime expense is something like $30,000 to care and feed one. That's about what mine has cost over the last 15 years.
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31-10-2012, 12:46 PM
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1 of 7 of 9
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Perth
Posts: 1,968
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Quote:
Originally Posted by astro_nutt
A visit to the local Cemetery shows that they wrap some laminated film around the trunk so the possums cannot climb them. Check out the local school to see if they have a 1 metre wide laminating machine...laminate some thick paper and wrap a 2 metre length about 1 metre above the ground and use thumb tacks to secure it to the tree trunk...
This way the little darlings can't get a grip and climb up and might follow a trail of apples out of the place...
No poisons, guns, harsh language,etc
Cheers!
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Yep that'll work for the tree!!!!
As for the veggie patch?????
What about a fence of fish lines with little bells on it?
Bartman
P.S. Nicely worded response Marty  . Very well worded.......
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31-10-2012, 12:48 PM
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Novichok test rabbit
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Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Somewhere in the cosmos...
Posts: 10,388
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.22 rifle, firing Long Z ammo. Barely hear it.
Not that I know anything about it...
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31-10-2012, 01:25 PM
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I can see clearly now ...
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Kingston TAS
Posts: 1,093
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Hi Alex,
Yes, banding trees definitely works down here. But two things to watch out for.
Firstly the band must be of material that the possum cannot sink it's quite sharp and sizable claws into it to get a grip (metal is best), wide enough so that they cannot reach across it (the 600mm mentioned earlier is about right) and high enough off the ground so that the possum cannot jump up and grab the trunk above the band.
Second thing is as mentioned in some earlier comments, possums are agile climbers and jumpers. So banding will only work if the tree is sufficiently isolated so that they cannot find another way into the tree. This can be quite a challenge in a standard suburban block.
There is a simple fencing solution for the vegie patch. But again it will only work if the patch and surrounding fence are isolated such that the possum cannot find another way up and over - eg close shrubs, trees power lines etc that they can climb and find ways into the vegie patch. The fence can be any material and a minimum 1 meter high. Then on top of the fence is fixed a section of chicken wire that is curved out away from the vegie patched such that the profile is a complete inverted semi circle. The radius of the loop should be about 300mm. Ordinary fencing wire bent to the same shape is needed every meter or so to support the curved section of chicken wire. The heavier duty chicken wire will be more durable. So the final profile of the fence is like an inverted "j"with the outside loop curving right around and pointing towards the ground. Possums are unable to navigated around the inverted loop section. This is highly effective with many gardens in our area (semi rural with high possum population) protected this way. Care needs to be taken to close off all possible access points, So the gate to the vegie patch will need the same treatment and as mentioned earlier they are agile climbers and only need the smallest of "toe hold" to find a way in. After all this, you may not have the room to be able to do this. The only other method that does not require regular attention is to fully enclose the vegie patch.
Cheers
Steve.
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