Once the bark turns rough. 10 years give or take.Do fruit trees ever reach a size where they're safe from real bad vole damage?
What Chummer said seems to be the key....Do fruit trees ever reach a size where they're safe from real bad vole damage?
Another good point..... I have gone back to not overly amending the soil ( if at all) that I put back in the hole I dug for the tree. I used to dump a bunch of enriched soil back in - on my clay ground thinking I was doing my trees a favor. Instead I made a salad bowel for the below ground voles to tunnel around in. I lost a handful of trees over the years to them and I believe its was simply a case of to much of a good thing that the trees didnt really need.Keep in mind there are different kinds of voles. Some do damage above ground. Some do damage below ground. Rough bark generally keeps above ground damage to a minimum.
Hey Chummer....what type of window screen do you recommend ?. Fiberglass type or metal ?. I've used hardware cloth before....but I'm thinking of trying something a little softer this year , like window screen . Do you staple it together ? thanks for any infoWhat Chummer said seems to be the key....
If the bark is smooth - even a decade old tree they can still get hit, but rough flakey bark never seems to get chewed on. I even lightly smeared tree tar on the base and tossed sand onto it and that seemed to work in the end the easiest long term method is the window screen. But where the mice and rabbits end the bucks take over.
I use aluminum screen and either fold it together, or staple it. Either way has worked well.Hey Chummer....what type of window screen do you recommend ?. Fiberglass type or metal ?. I've used hardware cloth before....but I'm thinking of trying something a little softer this year , like window screen . Do you staple it together ? thanks for any info
Thanks !I use aluminum screen and either fold it together, or staple it. Either way has worked well.
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