However, we'd forgotten about the newly installed flowerbed in the front yard. Shortly after we first met our new neighbors, Brian spotted one of them in the front yard and realized that all the plants we'd gone to such trouble to acquire were at risk of getting munched. He'd heard before that the smell of cat urine tended to scare groundhogs off, since cats are predators, so he took to scooping the clumps out of the cat box, breaking them up, and scattering them around the border of the flowerbed. This, as far as we could tell, was entirely ineffective. After he'd been at it for about three days, we discovered that roughly half the plants in the bed had been chomped on to some degree or other. The victims included two the yarrow plants (which groundhogs aren't even supposed to like), one sedum, one coreopsis, and basically all the echinaceas and violas. The only ones to remain untouched were the hellebores, which are poisonous and also, apparently, taste disgusting.
Clearly, we'd have to find some other way to protect our plants if we didn't want our latest attempt at creating a three-season flower garden to flop like the others. In particular, we wanted to save the sedum plants if at all possible. The hellebores seemed all right, and all the others could be regrown from seed, but the sedums had to be special ordered from a nursery, and we didn't want to go to the trouble or expense a second time. Plus, they were some of the largest plants in the bed, and we were counting on them to grow quickly and fill in some of the empty space.
So I did a little further research and came across this article in the Farmers' Almanac, which recommended several natural remedies. While some of them (such as cat litter and human hair) had already proved useless, there were a couple of others that looked promising — especially cayenne pepper spray, which deters groundhogs both with its scent and with its heat. I could easily imagine that if I were a groundhog and I took a healthy bite out of a plant doused in pepper juice, I'd quickly lose all inclination to come back for more.
So far, this seems to be working. He first applied the mixture last weekend and has reapplied it after every rainfall, and the flowers have suffered no further groundhog damage in that time. So I guess we'll keep it up until either (a) it stops deterring the groundhogs, or (b) they grow up and move out of our yard, or (c) the plants get big enough to handle the odd bite here and there without suffering any serious damage.
There is a postscript to this story: Last week, Brian saw that one of the little groundhogs had actually managed to get into the garden — that is, inside the fence — and was cheerfully munching on our lettuces. When it spotted him, it freaked out and escaped by climbing over up of our new potato plants and out over the top of the fence. However, this clearly wasn't the route it had used to get in, since the plants are on the inside of the fence and there's no way to climb up them from outside. He conducted a thorough survey of the border fence and found one place where the chicken wire had worked itself loose, leaving a gap that a baby groundhog could conceivably squeeze through. He fixed that, and since then we haven't seen any more groundhogs inside the garden, so we're hoping we've now blocked all their modes of ingress. But we're keeping a sharp eye out, just in case.
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