View Full Version : Keeping Raccoons out of the pond
Dean Krick
February 22nd 05, 03:24 PM
Hi... has anybody had success in keeping raccoons from attacking their
ponds? Raccoons have ate of my 50 or so fish in the pond down to 10. The
pond is shallow, 2 feet at the deepest (but very long). Animal control
has provided me a humongous trap, but I can only keep it for so long
and also have only caught my cat's and dogs. Thanx
~ jan JJsPond.us
February 22nd 05, 04:19 PM
On Tue, 22 Feb 2005 15:24:15 GMT, Dean Krick >
wrote:
>Hi... has anybody had success in keeping raccoons from attacking their
>ponds? Raccoons have ate of my 50 or so fish in the pond down to 10. The
>pond is shallow, 2 feet at the deepest (but very long). Animal control
>has provided me a humongous trap, but I can only keep it for so long
>and also have only caught my cat's and dogs. Thanx
Hot wire, electric fencing. You can get it at pet stores or ranch/feed
stores or do a search on your favorite pet store sight. ~ jan
See my ponds and filter design:
http://users.owt.com/jjspond/
~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website
kathy
February 22nd 05, 04:26 PM
What did they suggest you bait the trap with?
Someone once suggested using marshmallows
and attaching them in place so the raccoon doesn't
tip the trap to get at them, (and less likely to attract
cats?)
Also electric fencing like jan suggested, the scarecrow
motion dection sprinkler (attached to something solid).
good luck and let us know how it works out.
kathy
Bob Koerber
February 22nd 05, 05:07 PM
Dean Krick wrote:
> Hi... has anybody had success in keeping raccoons from attacking their
> ponds? Raccoons have ate of my 50 or so fish in the pond down to 10.
> The pond is shallow, 2 feet at the deepest (but very long). Animal
> control has provided me a humongous trap, but I can only keep it for
> so long and also have only caught my cat's and dogs. Thanx
Lock up the dogs and cats during the night. Get several cans of cat
food and punch holes in the top don't open all the way to bait the trap.
Bob
Derek Broughon
February 22nd 05, 06:20 PM
On Tue, 2005-22-02 at 08:19 -0800, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
> On Tue, 22 Feb 2005 15:24:15 GMT, Dean Krick >
> wrote:
>
> >Hi... has anybody had success in keeping raccoons from attacking their
> >ponds?
>
> Hot wire, electric fencing. You can get it at pet stores or ranch/feed
> stores or do a search on your favorite pet store sight. ~ jan
This surprised me. I've always felt that raccoons are, if not the
smartest mammal on the planet, certainly the cleverest. I never thought
an electric fence would stop them - if nothing else, I'd expect them to
find the on/off switch. A friend of mine has a vineyard, though, and he
manages to keep the raccoons out with a simple two strand electric
fence.
--
derek
jedi
February 22nd 05, 06:47 PM
My suggestion, which won't do you much use, is to make your pond with the
sides going straight down. The only way that I have found to deal with
raccoons is this method (also has kept out the herons from my pond but I
have considerable growth around the pond and my sides go down almost 3').
If you want shallow edges you can still have them but then in the center go
straight down on the sides and put crates along the sides to put plants and
form a barrier to keep fish from going into the shallow edges. If you build
a pond, wildlife will come. I know the fish lovers in here will flame me
for this but I come down on the side of the wildlife which we are decimating
by building over their habitat.
DK
"Dean Krick" > wrote in message
m...
> Hi... has anybody had success in keeping raccoons from attacking their
> ponds? Raccoons have ate of my 50 or so fish in the pond down to 10. The
> pond is shallow, 2 feet at the deepest (but very long). Animal control
> has provided me a humongous trap, but I can only keep it for so long
> and also have only caught my cat's and dogs. Thanx
Benign Vanilla
February 22nd 05, 06:48 PM
"Dean Krick" > wrote in message
m...
> Hi... has anybody had success in keeping raccoons from attacking their
> ponds? Raccoons have ate of my 50 or so fish in the pond down to 10. The
> pond is shallow, 2 feet at the deepest (but very long). Animal control
> has provided me a humongous trap, but I can only keep it for so long
> and also have only caught my cat's and dogs. Thanx
I've not had this problem, but some have had great success with motion
activated sprinklers, like this one from Amazon...
http://ihmp.net/@/dd
--
BV
Webporgmaster of iheartmypond.com
Come join our forums...PLEASE!!!
http://www.iheartmypond.com/phpbb
Bill Stock
February 23rd 05, 12:43 AM
"Derek Broughon" > wrote in message
. ca...
> On Tue, 2005-22-02 at 08:19 -0800, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
>> On Tue, 22 Feb 2005 15:24:15 GMT, Dean Krick >
>> wrote:
>>
>> >Hi... has anybody had success in keeping raccoons from attacking their
>> >ponds?
>>
>> Hot wire, electric fencing. You can get it at pet stores or ranch/feed
>> stores or do a search on your favorite pet store sight. ~ jan
>
> This surprised me. I've always felt that raccoons are, if not the
> smartest mammal on the planet, certainly the cleverest. I never thought
> an electric fence would stop them - if nothing else, I'd expect them to
> find the on/off switch. A friend of mine has a vineyard, though, and he
> manages to keep the raccoons out with a simple two strand electric
> fence.
> --
> derek
>
It's really quite amazing. Even the young ones stay away from the fence,
although they have never been zapped. They obviously listened to Mama.
~ jan JJsPond.us
February 23rd 05, 02:05 AM
Okay, I must admit, a motion sprinkler did work for me when I discovered a
raccoon was in the neighborhood, he'd made a mess of my pond, but didn't
catch anything. I feel they may be more determined if they've had a meal or
two. To go to a fishing spot where they've been "skunked" and then get
sprayed if they tried again, well that is just insult to injury. Even
raccoons have some pride. ;o) ~ jan
~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~
Derek Broughon
February 23rd 05, 02:12 PM
On Tue, 2005-22-02 at 18:05 -0800, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
> Okay, I must admit, a motion sprinkler did work for me when I discovered a
> raccoon was in the neighborhood, he'd made a mess of my pond, but didn't
> catch anything. I feel they may be more determined if they've had a meal or
> two. To go to a fishing spot where they've been "skunked" and then get
> sprayed if they tried again, well that is just insult to injury. Even
> raccoons have some pride. ;o) ~ jan
LOL. My dad had one got stuck in his compost bin - his best guess was
that the raccoon was there at least a week. I'm sure he had plenty to
eat, but he came out of there looking awfully slimy and rat-like, and he
just glared at us for watching him. Raccoons have a lot of pride :-)
--
derek
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