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  2. How to Keep Rabbits Out of Your Garden: 9 Wildlife ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-rabbits-garden-9-wildlife...

    Rabbits, deer, and Japanese beetles tend to avoid the same plants. 5. Choose Repellent Plants. While rabbits are less likely to eat rabbit-proof plants, some scented plants repel rabbits from gardens.

  3. How to Stop Rabbits From Destroying Your Garden - AOL

    www.aol.com/stop-rabbits-destroying-garden...

    Here are six easy ways to repel rabbits from your garden. Install a Physical Barrier. One of the easiest ways to keep rabbits away from your garden is to install a wire fence around your garden ...

  4. How to Keep Rabbits Out of Your Garden - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/keep-rabbits-garden...

    Rabbits are a common pest known for eating plants from flowers to veggies. Keep rabbits out of your garden with these humane and natural rabbit repellent ideas.

  5. List of pest-repelling plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pest-repelling_plants

    repels insects and rabbits [2] Myrrh: repels insects [5] Narcissus: repel moles [3] Nasturtiums: repel squash bugs, [2] aphids (though there is conflicting information with some sources stating it attracts aphids), [10] many beetles, and the cabbage looper [3] Onion: repels rabbits, the cabbage looper, and the Small White [3] Oregano: repellent ...

  6. Thiram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thiram

    Thiram is the simplest thiuram disulfide and the oxidized dimer of dimethyldithiocarbamate.It is used as a fungicide, ectoparasiticide to prevent fungal diseases in seed and crops and similarly as an animal repellent to protect fruit trees and ornamentals from damage by rabbits, rodents and deer.

  7. Electronic pest control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_pest_control

    Electronic pest control is the name given to any of several types of electrically powered devices designed to repel or eliminate pests, usually rodents or insects. Since these devices are not regulated under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act in the United States, the EPA does not require the same kind of efficacy testing that it does for chemical pesticides.