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  2. How To Keep Deer Out Of Your Garden For Good - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-deer-garden-good-142159477.html

    If you have a few prized plants, protect those instead of having to put up a whole fence. Make sure that the plant isn’t poking through, says Mengak. Clean up under bird feeders. “Birdseed isn ...

  3. Follow These Expert Tips to Keep Deer Out of Your Garden

    www.aol.com/expert-tips-keep-deer-garden...

    Fecal pellets: Deer droppings look like small, clustered dark beans. You'll usually find them where deer feed. Browsed bark: When food is scarce in the winter, deer sometimes chew on tree bark ...

  4. Want to Keep Deer From Eating Your Garden? Here's What to Plant

    www.aol.com/want-keep-deer-eating-garden...

    So do your best to plant deer-resistant types of plants and protect your favorites with a natural barrier. Then try repellent as an additional measure, and hope for the best.

  5. Deer management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_management

    If an area is being heavily affected by deer, repellents can be used to keep them away or minimize the damage. Deer repellent can produce a bad smell, burn the tongue, and taste bad. [11] The repellents can be natural or artificial but both use chemicals to deter the deer from causing damage. Repellents benefit gardens and orchids the most. [12]

  6. Horticulture Netting or Vegetable Support Net - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horticulture_Netting_or...

    Depending on the type of crop and plant to be trellised one can use netting of many different heights (these vary from 50 cm to up to more than 3 meters for use in greenhouses or shade house). When choosing the height of the vegetable trellis netting one should keep in mind that the net should be installed 30–40 cm above the soil.

  7. Browsing (herbivory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browsing_(herbivory)

    The plant material eaten is known as browse [3] and is in nature taken directly from the plant, though owners of livestock such as goats and deer may cut twigs or branches for feeding to their stock. [4] In temperate regions, owners take browse before leaf fall, then dry and store it as a winter feed supplement.