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O. T. Sweet corn and coons

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georgeky

08-14-2007 08:02:24




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I got two of those pescy little varmints(Ha ha ha} went out last night on critter patrol as coons have been really working on my corn. When I hit the light eyes were evrywhere. Well, one has gone on to a better world, one is in a live trap that I had set 3 or 4 days ago and his future is in doubt. There was also a deer eating with them. He has a sore hind end today I am guessing. They ruined all my first corn and I am just hoping on saving some of the late corn now.

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farmerweber in PA

08-14-2007 21:32:01




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
We used to drive them like deer.3 or 4 drivers and 3 or 4 shooters and a couple of spotlight guys.Never a shortage of people to come along.Works pretty good but it scares the hell out of the neighbors if you don't call them first.Have to use shotguns because they're hauling the mail when they come out.



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Brownie450

08-14-2007 20:00:47




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Keep the coons out with the electric fence--had deer problems though. Found a cure for that too. I have a bar of Irish Spring bath soap & walk around the patch shaving thin slices off as I go. The deer are scared by the smell I guess & won't come into the patch. I guess sweaty work clothes at the corners kind of help also.



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Al L. in Wisc.

08-14-2007 18:07:15




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 regarding trespassing in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Wisc. trespassing law passed several years ago states unless you have permission, you don't belong and the landowner doesn't have to post the property. A great law I think.



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Haas

08-14-2007 17:32:45




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
George, I used a single wire of electic fence about 8 inches up for years when I lived in on 5 acres near a subdivision. That worked well. Several years back I moved to the country on 40 acres. Turns out those country coons are smarter. I put one wire, then two, then three with a 4th ground wire. No luck. I don't know how those guys figured to get through it but they did. I finally ran a single wire down each row of corn about a foot off the ground. That did the trick. There is no way they can get in there without getting a good shock. Don't go cheap on your fencer. Get at least a 2 Joule model which will cost $100 or so. That is strong enough not to ground out when a few corn stalks or leaves get on it. This method is not really practical for a large patch, but for my garden of about 50 x 150 it works good. Also, I don't run the fence wires until the corn is starting to tastle.

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Bob Kerr

08-14-2007 17:12:07




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
I was thinking about putting in sweetcorn at Dads woods (there is a couple open areas), but thought better of it. too many critters and I am just not there enough to keep them out. Would have to put in enough for them to all get full just to have some for me. Might be several acres! The old timers used to plant 3 to a hole. The saying went one for God, one for the critters, and one for me.



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georgeky

08-14-2007 13:09:28




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Wow, I got some folks going it looks like. I am thinking of the electric fence, but that will be next year. As for the coon hounds and or hunters. I had rather the coons eat the corn than listen to those damn dogs barking all around me all night long. I will shoot all I find around my house. As for neighbors being on my place that doesn't bother me any at all as I will likely be on their place as well. The imports are the ones who sneak in on 4 wheelers and cut fences,leave gates open and throw their beer cans all over that gets me wound up. Thanks for all replies.

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Michael Soldan

08-14-2007 13:04:59




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Coon Patrol
1.)Radio in the patch
2.)Crystal fly bait+pepsi on a pie plate
3.)electric fence
4.)Live trap+ammunition
5.)Search and destroy

Item number 2 works best, cats will not touch it



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georgeky

08-14-2007 13:13:10




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to Michael Soldan, 08-14-2007 13:04:59  
I do have a radio,flood light,live trap, and shotgun on duty. An old forum buddy or 2 emailed me with info on the fly dope and pepsi trick. I hate to resort to that as the dogs might get it. Don't care about the cats.



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john d

08-14-2007 11:37:53




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Electric fence will do some good, of course if the ground is really dry, or the grass and weeds grow up into it, the effectiveness is gone.

If the patch isn't too large, and if your raccoons aren't overly aclimated to people, you can get some pretty good results with radios. For several years I've put three radios in plastic bags (for rain protection) and put them in the patch. I set them on three different stations - usually rock, talk, and C/W, and haven't lost corn when I REMEMBERED to turn them on! I turn them on an hour or so before dark, and off in the morning. I set the volume on each loud enough that I can hear it from anywhere in the patch. The coons evidently don't feel comfortable with three different stations competing for air space.

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El Toro

08-14-2007 11:00:43




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
I think you should go with the electric wires too. My neighbor had steers and they would jump that wooden fence like it wasn't there. I would see his wife out there trying to get them back in the pasture and I would go over to help. They would usually jump back over. Her husband put electric wires above the wooden fence and those steers did go over to fence to check out those wires, but once they got zapped they never went
near the fence. The owner of this farm along with his dad had a Case dealership. This was back in the 1960's. Hal

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Ron-Mo

08-14-2007 10:22:54




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Been sending all that I see on to a better place. Caught 3 in one live trap a few weeks ago. A couple of the locals liked to hunt and I talked to them and just asked them to let me know when they were going to enter my property. They act like I am insulting them and continued to enter my property with lights without my knowlege. I told them I could not tell the good guys from the bad guys and if they were not going to work with me they can stay off my property. Of course I got the "I can run my dogs where I want" speech, but they could not explain how they were going to handle a treed dog with me not allowing them to enter behind the dog. Have not seem much of them since, so I guess I have to just live trap them and take care of the situation as it arises. No respect for the landowner any more.

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Andy Martin

08-14-2007 11:23:45




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to Ron-Mo, 08-14-2007 10:22:54  
Another city boy moves to the country.

Landowners with no respect for the neighbors.

People who live on the land realize they may pay taxes, but they don't really own it. They are just caretakers for a while and then it passes on to someone else.

Anybody can hunt, fish, gather walnuts, mushrooms, or just hike on my land if they like. Whether I like is kind of moot, most of the time I don't know they've been there except when one calls to report trouble. Less fortunate people who don't have a big place are still people. There comes a day, either during a fire, flood, have cattle out, etc. when you recognize having friends for neighbors is a good thing. Like the call the other day when she says "I put two cows and a calf back in, I hope they were yours. I didn't have nothing to fix the fence."

We get the folks buying 10 acre "ranches", put up their fences, no trespassing signs, etc., and they sell out before long because "everyone is so unfriendly".

You'll find the "locals" won't leave the gate open, shoot a cow for fun, or set the place on fire, unless maybe you try to show them how much better you are because you have and they don't. You best not shoot a hunting dog around here, unless it is running livestock.

The city folks fight over a fence being in the wrong place by a few feet. I never understand that. You know where the fence is, and you know on your side is your's. What difference does it make that some surveyor says it should be fifteen feet over there? That's on his side and you know it is his. You're not going to pasture another cow on 1/4 acre whether it "should" be yours or not, but you sure can lose a friend arguing over it.

Just my thoughts.

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Ron-Mo

08-14-2007 13:53:13




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to Andy Martin, 08-14-2007 11:23:45  
Andy, I think you thought wrong. I am far from a city boy who moved to the country. I probably worked more hours on the farm than most. I own 110 acres that has been in my family for nearly 100 years. Yes, it is probably just a small hobby farm by some standards. I guess I was raised differently, and yes, real neighbors look out for one another, but that is the exception now. I guess my father taught me to respect others property. To ask permission before entering, leave it the way you found it, etc, etc. Yes, I have no trespassing signs up and my father had them 40 years ago on the same property. Most of the people I have trouble with are NOT close neighbors, but the "city boys" coming out to the country to hunt, fish, or whatever (mostly whatever). In this area if you leave your gates open you will regret it most likely. The last time I left a gate open overnight with no one around they drove through the field, broke every door on the place down and ransacked it. Fortunately they never set fire to it as well. I have had these people cut my fence, break down doors, drive 4 wheelers, trucks, dirt bikes, road hunt, and give me cussings until I play no favorites. Enough is enough, and yes, when I am gone someone else can decide who comes and goes. Until then I decide.

Just my thoughts. Respectively.

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NawlensGator

08-14-2007 10:30:17




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to Ron-Mo, 08-14-2007 10:22:54  

Shooting 1 or 2 of their dogs would have put an end to it also. Reasoning doesn't work with some people.



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NawlensGator

08-14-2007 09:56:04




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  

A couple of blueticks will keep them cleared out for about a mile radius. The ones who wonder too close will be scrambling for higher ground up a tree. I've had a few and they really get after the masked bandits.



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MN Scott

08-14-2007 09:49:30




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Put an electric wire around you patch. One 17 gauge wire about 4 inches from the ground with a good fencer. Been using electric fence for years and have yet to lose a single ear to coons.



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TGIN

08-14-2007 09:45:57




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Just heard this one yesterday . They started getting in this guys small corn patch and he put one of those black light bug zappers out there and he said it kept them scared off . I guess the bigger the patch the more you would need to set up . He said he watched some get close then when a bug would get zapped they would run .



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El Toro

08-14-2007 08:30:36




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
When my brother and I were teens we always had a flock of roosters for eating along with a lot of laying hens. The roosters were kept separated in another wire enclosure and my mom said something
is stealing the roosters. We set traps and found 2 young coons in the traps we sent them to coon heaven. No more roosters disappeared. Hal



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Al L. in Wisc.

08-14-2007 08:30:10




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to georgeky, 08-14-2007 08:02:24  
Did they bring their own salt shaker??!! I heard this on Wisc. Public Radio and it has given good results: run an electric fence about eight inches above the ground. Can you imagine their little paws holding the wire like a little kid who just can't resist. Or...maybe a country cousin sayin' 'go ahead, it won't hurt.' Bet it lights up there mask covered eyes :^). Good luck



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DennyF

08-14-2007 09:59:14




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to Al L. in Wisc., 08-14-2007 08:30:10  
One feller I know, runs a two-wire electric fence around his corn patch: Top wire is about a foot high, lower wire is about 6" off'n the ground. 'Course it requires regular weed-whacking around it.

Looks kinda bizarre though, all them little green posts and yellow insulators in such a dainty package.



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teddy52food

08-14-2007 10:41:51




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 Re: O. T. Sweet corn and coons in reply to DennyF, 08-14-2007 09:59:14  
I run 3 wires about 5 or 6 inches apart. I ground the center wire so if the ground is too dry they get it when they get between the wires.



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