We're getting closer to the end of the year, but we're still not done with Faux Real Story Week. Ok, it's been two weeks. But, I suspect very few are upset about that.
Fill up the hot chocolate mug and gather around the fire - here comes another one!
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Our biggest nemesis in our early gardens
was the rabbit. And we tried several approaches to exclude them from our
vegetable crops.
We
even tried reasoning with them - after all, rabbits
have this nasty habit of taking out very young plants - even if
more established
options were available. You would think they would understand
that there would be MORE, not less, to eat if they let things get a bit
bigger. Heck, I would have gladly given them some of our bounty if they
would just leave the little, baby plants alone!
Unfortunately, the average education level for
members of Rodentia is fairly low, so we resorted to fencing.
Rabbit fencing has smaller holes closer
to the ground to keep rabbits and other critters from crawling/hopping/walking
through. And, we had carefully placed timbers around the perimeter of the garden
and then erected a fence that tied into those timbers. We reasoned (and
correctly so) that this would make it difficult for critters to make a
quick burrow under the fence.
We entered the gardening season feeling
as if we had prepared well for the inevitable rabbit population explosion
in our neighborhood. And, we might have been....UNTIL....
One day, the neighbors noticed the cute little bunnies
in the bunny nest.
"Aren't they cute? Would you like to pet them?"
" No. No, thank
you."
Even then, they had beady eyes. Never trust a critter
with beady eyes. Especially when vegetables are on the line.
The neighbor's dog noticed the cute little
bunnies just outside their bunny nest a week later.
"Aren't they cute?
Would you like to taste them?"
"Yes, I would," said the dog.
Run bunnies! Run! Run dog! Run!
Look out! There's a
fence!
I bet we
can get through it because we are still small. Squeeeeeze...
pop! Two baby bunnies, complete with beady eyes, in the garden.
One dog - crashing into said fence. The fence stood up to the collision and the dog bounced back up to chase the third bunny in
another direction.
Meanwhile the two bunnies in the garden looked around.
Utopia! Baby veggies everywhere!
See the bunnies. See the bunnies see the veggies
with their beady eyes.
See them get fat. Now they cannot not get back out of the garden because their baby bunny tummies are full.
They are
safe because the puppy dog cannot get in. The humans cannot
chase them out. The
humans cannot catch them. The humans can't even throw rocks at
them for fear of destroying the very vegetables they seek to protect.
Sigh. Anyone for organically raised rabbit?
Eventually, we removed the fence, chased
the rabbits out and replaced the fence. We really outsmarted those critters
that time, didn't we?
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