Allen and Virginia ,   A while back ,before we got our dog, we went on a
trip and came home to a devestated corn patch, with lots of half eaten corn,
damage from a coon  . We now have  a big yellow lab that feels duty bound to
protect the perimiters, she had a groundhog in a tree last year for a whole
day, till we brought her indoors so the groundhog could leave. Perhaps the
right dog could help send the word out to the critters to keep their
distance.  We have some bd neighbors who actually bought and trained their
dog to guard their flock of 300 egg layers that were free ranged from the
healthy population of fox in the woods surrounding them. just a thought. We
all need to eat. ( csa members included.) :)sharon
----- Original Message -----
From: "Allan Balliett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, September 08, 2002 7:14 AM
Subject: Re: Field Broadcaster


> I agree with Virginia.
>
> When you're growing for a CSA, you've made a commitment to families
> with children to provide them with as much food as your skill and the
> season allow.
> Deer damage much more than what they eat. One of the worst things
> they will do is trample remay that is excluding flea beetles (oops,
> there I go again!!) from cole crops. Their hooves tear the remay,
> damage that may not be discovered until harvest time. (Which remind
> me: as well as zuchinni that seemed to bear for months, I seem to
> remember remay that didn't tear as easily as any remay I buy nowadays
> does.)
>
> We get lots of stuff just out and out trampled also.
>
> The deer only bother our stuff, however, when it's more desireable
> than what they can fine in the woods. This season, apparently, there
> wasnt a lot of edamame out in the woods.
>
> >Dear Sharon,
> >
> >You are most generous and I imagine unruffled even when the corn
> >plants you have sweated over are all broken, your trees are
> >continually browsed or the fruits that you've waited for are strewn
> >all over the place before they even mature.  While they may eat
> >some, the damage they cause is to an extent that some people have
> >given up growing a garden altogether.  Too bad, because gardening is
> >immensely therapeutic and healing. For animals, there are wild
> >plants in abundance which may be much more healing for them.
> >
> >Virginia
>
>
>

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