9 Tips To Make CATS Flee From Your Garden FOREVER.
Tired of neighborhood cats defecating in your garden?
Unwanted cats who leave their poop in your garden ... it's annoying!
In addition, cats are a danger to your health ... Why?
Because cat feces can contain toxoplasmosis and contaminate the soil in your garden.
Really to be avoided if you have a vegetable garden where you grow fruits and vegetables!
So how do you prevent cats from coming into your garden and flower bed?
Fortunately, there is 9 simple and effective tips to scare away garden cats for good. Look :
1. Use stinging stuff
Do you know why cats love to hang around your plants? Because they love soft surfaces, like dirt.
This is because cats carefully avoid stinging surfaces, as the pads under their paws are very sensitive.
So, an easy solution to keep cats away is to make the surface of your garden as uninviting as possible!
You just have to dispose of itchy stuff on your garden floor, and the cats will never come back!
Here are some easy and inexpensive tips you can use:
– Twigs: place the twigs where cats like to roam in your garden. Space them a few inches apart and leave them until your plants have grown well in the spring. In addition, it will help the bees! Indeed, a bundle of twigs is an ideal shelter for bees!
- Pare of pine: drive pine cones into the ground.In fact, you can use whatever comes to hand, as long as it stings! So, try with dead leaves, gravel, crushed eggshells, holly or bramble in small branches or even an old non-slip mat, with the non-slip side up.
- Wooden chopsticks: keep your wooden chopsticks and skewers and reuse them in the garden. Just plant them in the soil, being careful not to space them too far apart so the cats can't turn around.
- Chicken grill: cover the ground with chicken netting. The trick also works with a piece of fence or a trellis placed on the ground. And rest assured, plants can grow through holes in the wire mesh.
- Food mesh bags: do you see those mesh bags in which we buy onions or potatoes? You can also reuse them to cover the garden soil. Just secure them by driving in twigs or stakes. If necessary, increase the size of the holes around your plants as they grow. Be careful, because the mesh bags are made of nylon and should not fly away or be forgotten in your garden!
2. Use smells cats hate
Cats are very sensitive to smell, and they are careful to avoid certain odors with natural repellant properties.
- Fragrant flowers: cats avoid certain fragrant flowers, such as rue officinale, lavender, Pouliot mint, Plectranthus caninus and lemon thyme. Try to plant these flowers to keep cats away. Also, intercropping different varieties of plants helps attract pollinators and other beneficial insects to your garden.
- Citrus: cats avoid citrus smells. Place citrus peels directly on the soil in the garden.
- Coffee grounds : sprinkle coffee grounds where cats are wreaking havoc. If you don't have enough, go ask for coffee grounds at cafes near you. They will give you free coffee grounds for sure! Check out the trick here.
- Human hair: Human hair is said to be an excellent cat repellant. When you clean your brush, put some in your garden. You can also ask your hairdresser to pick it up for you.
- Commercial sprays: there are also commercial repellents, like this spray, which mimic the urine odors of cat predators. Non-toxic and organic, these products are also safe for your plants.
3. Use wire mesh around your garden
Use a wire mesh fence to prevent cats from wandering around your plants.
Gardeners advise to use a wire mesh 5 cm by 5 cm mesh, and to raise it to a height of at least 1.75 meters.
Maybe you already have a wooden fence all around your garden?
So, to prevent neighborhood cats from entering, you can also install a slanted wire mesh return, as in the photo below.
4. Keep the soil in your garden moist.
Water the soil around your plants and places where cats come to relieve themselves
You can simply spray water on the soil with a spray bottle or garden sprayer, like this one.
There are also sprinkler systems with motion detectors, like this one.
As soon as a cat walks past the sensor, the device launches a jet of water to scare it away from the garden.
Just be sure to turn off this type of device when you're in your garden, and adhere to water usage restrictions in case of drought.
5. Frighten cats with noise
To keep cats away with noise, hang a wind chime or a bell that rings with the wind.
Alternatively, use a simple jar filled with gravel, which you can shake to make noise when a cat approaches your yard.
There are also several ultrasonic repellants available, which activate when cats get too close.
These devices make a noise that cats hate, but rest assured, it is inaudible to humans.
6. Use this white vinegar repellant
Cats hate the strong smell of white vinegar!
Use this easy remedy to get rid of invasive cats for good.
For this tip, you have the choice between 2 simple and effective methods.
Either you spray the pure white vinegar directly on the places where the cats make their needs so that they do not come back.
Either you wet the newspapers completely with white vinegar and put the newspapers where cats hang out in your garden.
In both cases, remember to repeat the operation every week. Check out the trick here.
7. Clean up areas where cats relieve themselves.
Cats tend to choose the same place to relieve themselves.
To prevent recurrence, eliminate urine odors by cleaning the area with a garden hose (or with rainwater if you are using a collector).
For a more powerful cleaning, use a 100% ecological product such as black soap to clean door sills, garden furniture and other strategic places.
To discover : 17 Amazing Uses of BLACK SOAP For Home, Garden And Beauty.
8. Install a small outdoor litter box
The neighbor's cat is taking your yard like a litter box? Perhaps the solution is to make a peace offering!
Try planting plants that all cats love: mint, honeysuckle or catnip.
Then, set up a small sandbox next to the plants, which the cat can use as an outdoor litter box to do its business.
Yes, that means you are probably going to have to clean up the poop every now and then.
But this may be the compromise you need to stop cats dragging their paws in your precious vegetable garden!
9. Build a covered shelter
Is your own cat wreaking havoc in the garden?
To save your plants and prevent your cat from attacking birds, you can build a covered shelter.
Click here to find out how to make a covered shelter, and let your cat go out into the garden without any risk.
3 good reasons to chase cats from the garden
1. Because their droppings are a danger to your health
Cat feces can contain parasites or pathogens, which are not found in manure.
In fact, the manure used in the garden or vegetable patch comes from herbivorous animals.
So, cat poop poses a real health risk - especially for those who grow fruits and vegetables in their backyard.
Be aware that this risk also applies to dog poop!
2. Because they kill birds
The cat is a formidable predator.
In fact, according to this study, domestic cats kill billions of birds and mammals every year.
And if you do it right, you are already planting those flowers that attract hummingbirds, butterflies, bees, and other pollinators.
3. Because they disrupt relations with your neighbors
Eh yes ! It's difficult to maintain good relations with your neighbors when their cat comes to defecate in your vegetable garden!
Your turn...
Have you tried these effective tips to repel cats from your garden? Tell us in the comments if it worked for you. We can't wait to hear from you!
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Also to discover:
6 Effective Tips To Get Away Cats Easily.
How to fight against the smell of cat pee? My 3 Miracle Ingredients.