Who dug up my corn!!
I planted my corn bed last month and not a single plant emerged. I thought that maybe I was negligent during a hot dry spell and the germinating seeds dried out at a critical time, so I replanted the bed last week This time I watered every day, sometimes twice.
Yesterday I noticed what I thought were deer hoof prints in the corn bed, until I realized that the holes aligned perfectly with the rows and spacing of the corn - straight rows at one foot intervals. Some critter actually dug up and ate every corn kernel, all 500!! Whatever it was it had a keen sense of smell as it just dug up the seeds where they were planted, no where else. It went down the rows and dug a hole every foot exactly where the corn was. One friend suggested it was a skunk, and another said a Brown Thrasher. I doubt that a bird could have that good of a sense of smell, so I'm thinking skunk or opossum. Any ideas?? PS - I replanted today with an earlier variety and will cover with row cover fabric until the plants emerge. |
Could this be birds? :?!?:
Almost sounds too methodical, to get every last kernel though.... :surprised: |
Crows, blame it on crows.
They were watching you plant it. Worth |
I would bet on a raccoon or a squirrel. I had a couple dozen germinated walnuts with 10 inch plants showing above the mix. I set them on the back patio and then got called to town on what turned out to not be an emergency. After about 2 hours, I returned to find that a single squirrel had dug out all of the one gallon containers and eaten the nut and its plant material.
The little glutton did not leave a single one. They have an amazing sense of smell. And, the raccoons around here do not allow me to plant corn. After three attempts and no harvest, I gave up. Once they find the first kernel, they take it all. |
My guess is wild hogs. They do the same thing to peanut farmers sometimes. They are very smart and cunning and will devastate a crop. Only solution is to kill them if you can spot them which is easiest at night.
Bill |
No wild hogs around here. I eliminated chipmunks and squirrels as I doubt they could eat 500 germinating kernels in one night. Raccoons would be my prime suspect, but I can't eliminate skunks or opossums as we have lots of all three. Could groundhogs be a possibility?
In any case I covered the bed with row cover cloth today and hope this will discourage and further poaching! |
I have had the same thing happen. Shoot a crow and hang dead one in the garden.
|
[B][FONT=Garamond][SIZE=3]I think it was a vegan chupacabra. :lol:
[/SIZE][/FONT][/B] |
Crows are smart and can see you planting seeds from a mile away.
I didn't think the [FONT=Garamond][SIZE=3]chupacabra got that far north. Worth [/SIZE][/FONT] |
I'm with Worth on this one and when the corn comes up they will pull it up and eat the seed and leave the stalk.
|
Generally, crows wait until the kernels sprout. They take one of their feet to uproot the young plant and eat the kernel off the bottom and toss the plant.
|
[QUOTE=ContainerTed;705410]I would bet on a raccoon or a squirrel. I had a couple dozen germinated walnuts with 10 inch plants showing above the mix. I set them on the back patio and then got called to town on what turned out to not be an emergency. After about 2 hours, I returned to find that a single squirrel had dug out all of the one gallon containers and eaten the nut and its plant material.
The little glutton did not leave a single one. They have an amazing sense of smell. And, the raccoons around here do not allow me to plant corn. After three attempts and no harvest, I gave up. Once they find the first kernel, they take it all.[/QUOTE] Hi Ted. Use bailing wire to secure chicken wire(mesh) over the container. Use a stake to keep the tree rats from being able to move the container. Place a toe popper next to the container:twisted: |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:54 PM. |
★ Tomatoville® is a registered trademark of Commerce Holdings, LLC ★ All Content ©2022 Commerce Holdings, LLC ★