How Can I Prevent Digging in the Garden?

Wild animals can be a real nuisance in the vegetable patch. Here are some ideas that may help of keep the animal pests out of the garden.

As backyard gardeners, we face many obstacles to growing a nice little crop. From weather, to pests and soil problems, it sometimes feels like a full time job. My ongoing fight is in finding ways to prevent digging in the garden.

The Problems

Each morning when I go out to inspect the yard, I find the damage done overnight. Sometimes it’s not bad, and other times it’s a mess. 

My animal pests may be different from yours. I have southern pests that live in the neighborhood. My daughter in New Hampshire has a very hungry groundhog that eats her things. It seems that we all deal with something.

Raccoons

The raccoons are my biggest problem. The little bandits are unafraid and love to mess with everything. They arrive in groups and are like naughty little children who want to touch and destroy. They knock over my pots, play in the birdbath, pull up seedlings, pick vegetables, and steal things. I mistakenly left my water shoes outside to dry overnight and found one shoe at the edge of the woods. 

Last summer they managed to open this small watermelon. And they wait until the tomatoes are nice and red and get them just before I can! For that reason, I’ve begun growing tomatoes in fabric bags so I can drag them inside overnight.

Armadillos

I also have armadillos and they dig deep small holes all over the place in search of bugs and food. Even though they can be destructive, they are less so than raccoons.

It helps to remember that animals are just doing their thing.  They are hungry, and are in search of some things that you might actually want gone from the yard, like roaches, spiders and grubs.

House Cats

My cats do go outside and they will try to do their business where there is nice dirt to dig. If I go outside with them in the morning, I can shoo them off the garden area. Neighborhood cats also come into the yard, but overall they leave the garden area alone. Cats are not nearly as destructive as my overnight visitors.

Solution: Block Access

I need to take preventative measures that will keep animals away in a humane way. I’ve considered putting up a fence, but raccoons will climb right over. Each problem area needs to be blocked. Fortunately my garden area is small.

Tomato cages come in handy for blocking (somewhat) access to plants. It doesn’t always work, but it might be enough of a deterrent for some. 

For instance, something is climbing my Moringa tree, and this is a new problem. Branches are broken off, and scratch marks are all up and down the trunk. I have cages all around the Moringa trunk to make climbing the tree more difficult. I hope this works.

Large and small boards, wood scraps, placed randomly on the dirt could deter digging. Also use rocks if you have them. The photo below shows wood placed between my rows of beans. Doing this also helps to keep my cats from digging here.

wood boards as prevention for digging in vegetable garden area
Placing bits of wood to prevent digging

This does help I think, but does not keep hungry critters from moving the obstacles and then digging. The eggplant in my photo below got dug up even though I had made a base of bricks around the stem. The plant was fine.

holes dug around base of garden plants
Bricks as digging prevention – didn’t work here

Thorny Stems

Surround the vegetable plants with thorny stems, prickly vines and other things animals won’t want to touch.

Along the edge of my property, which is next to an overgrown lot, there are wild plants growing that have very thorny stems. They are the Southern Dewberry. The vines are full of thorns which make them difficult to deal with if they invade the yard, but the flowers attract loads of bees and the fruit feeds wildlife. Now, the thorny stems, when placed over, or near, seedlings and planted beds, can also be used to deter raccoon paws.

I have put those thorns to good use by placing them over may beet seedlings. Eventually the dewberry stems die and turn brown, but stay thorny.

Store Bought Spikes

I’ve recently considered buying spiky mats to strategically use as protection. At first I thought of using upside down bathmats with grippers on the bottom. While searching Amazon, I found “cat repellent” mats (paid link) – actually a lot of options for this – to use inside and out. 

The item doesn’t have to be dangerous, just uncomfortable to touch or walk on. But, the raccoons could easily move these. Also they couldn’t be left down on top of the soil, so this option includes work and remembering to do it. I’m not sure this type of thing would work for my needs.

Raise the Garden Beds

Possibly the best way to prevent animals from digging up seedlings and picking ripe tomatoes, is to plant in a container that is high up off the ground. My son brought home barrels and cut them in half to make tall, raised beds. He also made the wooden stands. 

But even these tall, white barrel boxes sometimes have footprints and signs of digging. Many night foragers are also climbers. Nothing and no place is safe, can we agree?

barrel raised garden bed with tomatoes growing
These tomato plants need more sun.

Scatter Natural Repellent Smells

You’ve probably heard about items that can be added to the garden, and plants, that might keep animal pests away. 

One is to make a hot pepper spray to coat plants. I’ve never done this because I hate sprayers. They work once and then no more. I have sprinkled Cayenne pepper and it has done nothing but turn the leaves brown. 

Moth balls are too gross to put near my food. 

BUT, TRY THIS: Citrus slices and peels can be a natural repellent to wildlife. Many animals apparently dislike oranges, lemons and limes. 

Image by Marijana from Pixabay

My Goal is to Deter and Not Remove

I am not trying to get rid of these animals. Some people use traps and take the animals far away to live in the wilderness. I actually feel sorry for all of the wildlife around me that has been pushed out of a natural environment by the clearing of land and building of houses.

Not only that, many homeowners choose to have companies come and spray chemicals all over their yards. They want pristine lawns and bug free grass. In doing so they are removing vital food from the food chain and depriving animals from finding the food they need to survive.

Raccoons and armadillos need to eat, just like we do, and I don’t mind sharing my yard with them. I am an organic gardener, and they can probably find food in my yard, which I am okay with. My goal is to steer them away from the garden area. Maybe it’s futile, and I know it will be ongoing. If only they could read, I’d put up a sign.

sunflowers funny garden sign for animal pests
Garden sign available for purchase in my store.

More garden stories:

Loading…

Something went wrong. Please refresh the page and/or try again.

Picking and Eating Watermelon From My Garden

I managed to grow three watermelons in my Florida backyard this year. Here is how they turned out, and how I figured out when to pick them.

On April 8th I planted watermelon seeds. On June 30th I pick three watermelon from my backyard garden.

As I do every morning, I walked the yard and inspected the vegetable garden. Usually I have a couple of okra to cut (yuk), but my main inspection goes to the beautiful watermelons growing. I’ve never in my long life be able to grow watermelon. This year I had four beautiful melons growing.

As I came to the garden I saw that one of the watermelon vines was pulled back from its usual spot, and then I saw the chewed melon. It was the smallest of the four melons, and probably the easiest for the raccoons to get into.

raccoons broke into a watermelon
Watermelon disaster

I had three more watermelons which were still okay, but they did show signs of claw marks.

I’d been wondering if I would be able to tell when the watermelons were ready to be picked. The seed packet mentioned a browning of the tendril closest to the melon. I wasn’t sure what that meant, so I watched a video and then realized it was the little, curly thing coming off the vine. Sure enough, the ones nearest all my watermelons were brown. So they were all ready to be picked.

watermelon tendril brown
Brown tendril – a sign the melon is ready

Watermelon, From Baby to Being Picked

It took nearly three months, but was worth the wait to have delicious fruit right from the garden! It’s what we gardeners live for.

  • baby watermelon growing on the vine
  • June garden with watermelon
  • Raccoon marks on watermelon
  • watermelon from the garden

Cutting and Eating

I decided to cut the watermelon outside on the patio table. This mainly comes from my fear of slush pouring out instead of the inside being solid.

Cutting home-grown watermelons from the garden on my outdoor patio table.

Many years ago I worked in the produce section of a grocery store. My job one day was to slice watermelon and package it. As I cut into a big melon, all the insides gushed out all over me and the floor! I never forgot it, and always worry whenever I cut a watermelon.

So I did my cutting outdoors, and I was so happy to see the red inside when I first opened the big melon. Then I tasted it, and yum! I’d grown my very first edible watermelons!

  • inside the watermelon
  • watermelon cutting board sliced fruit
  • bowl of red watermelon to eat
  • watermelon eating

I’ve only cut the largest watermelon, but it is delicious. Even if the other two are not good, I am so happy to have had one that is perfect.

I saved a bunch of those big, white seeds. I may try to grow more before Fall because we have months of heat still ahead of us.

This type is the Strawberry Watermelon and I bought the seeds from Southern Exposure Seed Exchange (the link goes there).

watermelon seeds on glass plate
Saving watermelon seeds

Read more gardening stories:

Okay, I Hate These Raccoons

After we moved into our new house in Florida, we noticed every night that raccoons would come out of the woods next door and explore our yard.  They came right up to the back door, with the outside light on.

Raccoons at my back door

Oh, they were so cute. One time we looked out back to see three little raccoon faces peering out of the woods at us. .  It was adorable, and if I were any kind of photographer I would have had the camera handy and captured that image.

However, I know that raccoons are not the sweet, adorable creatures they appear to be.  And these days I abhor seeing their cute faces. They are thieves, that even wear masks as a warning!  They have no regard for the hard work farmers and gardeners put into growing their crops.

Raccoons have sharp claws and teeth. They can be vicious if need be, and the ones that visit my yard are mostly unafraid of humans and my cats. They mostly do their damage at night, but we’ve been sitting at the outside table, in full daylight,  and had one come out of the woods a mere 10 feet from us. Once he noticed we were there, he left. Rabies is common among them, but this one did not act in an unusual manner. I think he just wanted to see what we were up to.

I usually leave water outside for the cats during the day because of the heat. If I don’t empty the bucket, the raccoons always get into the water overnight and leave a muddy mess.  Occasionally they dump the bucket.

One evening after we had been out on our boat, I rinsed my expensive water shoes and left them to dry on the back patio. The next morning one of my shoes was missing! Luckily I found the shoe at the edge of the woods where apparently the raccoon decided it would be of no use to him.

sunflower stalk
My sunflower was much taller than this when the raccoons tore it down.

That same morning I discovered my tall sunflower stalk broken and dragged across the grass. It was the only sunflower seed that grew for me, and I really had hoped to see the flower bloom.

But worst of all is the stealing of my tomatoes. I just picked two ripe tomatoes and left about 4 more green ones on the vine. Today I saw that all the green tomatoes were gone! Last week they stole 2 nice red ones just before I had a chance to pick them.

They will drag pots and my fabric potting bags around.  It seems they have a grand old time during the darkness of night.  When the weather is nice, and my windows are open, I can hear them outside my window at night scampering around and occasionally “screaming” at each other.  Yes, they make noise, and it’s creepy.

raccoon and chain link fence
Raccoon image from Pixabay

I’m thinking it’s time for a fence. However, I am not sure that will keep them away. I’ve read that they can climb fences, and we’ve watched them climb down from way up in a neighboring tree. The fence may have to be made of slick material, like metal or plastic, that they cannot climb.  I’m saving my money, as we had planned to fence the yard anyway.  These creatures just give me more incentive to do so.

I can only hope that with a wall between them and my yard the little robbers, or bandits as they are rightfully called, will forget about my garden and go someplace else to scavenge.

(