The Story of Doe #45 – Fine Gardening

Hi GPODers!

Today we’ve got a short story that is a tale as old as time, or as old as gardeners have been planting flowers to be enjoyed rather than munched on by curious neighbors. Kathryn ‘Kit’ Jensen has shared her garden a couple of times in the past (Check out those submissions here: Bulbs in Northeastern Ohio and Finding Solace in Kit’s Garden), and today she’s sharing a very relatable run-in with a cute but destructive garden guests.

I live in an older suburb of the metro Cleveland area—South Euclid. We are blessed with city parks, a section of the Metroparks, and creeks. The downside is the deer. The city, like others, is experimenting with deer sterilization.

Below is doe #45, named after her tag. Now, three sides of my backyard are fenced but occasionally deer will wander up the driveway.

This became the favorite spot for #45, under the redbud trees, next to Solomon’s Seal, and white anemones, tucked behind a curve of perennial chrysanthemums, zinnias, alyssum, a tree hydrangea, verbena bonariensis, purple lovegrass, and “pearl”, a yarrow. Idyllic! There she was on a September morning. After persuasion, deer #45 left.

deer laying in a gardenBut…here is #45 back again on the second morning, and after spraying. The rope in the background is a clothesline I used to deter deer from munching on the oakleaf hydrangeas along the fence over winter. That works.

chair blocking deer from getting to gardenThe third picture is my solution—garden chairs and flower stakes sticking up in the bed between the chairs.

So far, so good. Have others found inventive ways to prevent deer from moving in on gardens?

We’re lucky to have a a pretty decent sized fence that keeps deer from snaking on our plants, but we haven’t been so lucky with the groundhogs. We’ve tried just about every deterrent and used every material possible to block holes and potential entry points, but they have the will and find a way. Whether its deer or a different kind of garden pest, let Kit and I know in the comments how you deal!

 

Have a garden you’d like to share?

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To submit, send 5-10 photos to [email protected] along with some information about the plants in the pictures and where you took the photos. We’d love to hear where you are located, how long you’ve been gardening, successes you are proud of, failures you learned from, hopes for the future, favorite plants, or funny stories from your garden.

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