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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

    Fencing is the gold standard for keeping out hungry deer. While a motivated deer can clear an 8-foot-fence, you can discourage most deer with a fence around your garden that’s 6 feet tall, says ...

  3. The Chicest Ways to Ward Off Deer - AOL

    www.aol.com/chicest-ways-ward-off-deer-185100441...

    From industrial fencing to deer-resistant plants, we’ve gathered the six best methods to keep deer out of your garden this growing season and beyond. Install Deer Fencing

  4. 40 Deer-Resistant Plants That'll Keep Bambi Away for Good - AOL

    www.aol.com/40-deer-resistant-plants-thatll...

    Here, the best deer-resistant flowers, herbs, and plants to keep Bambi away. ... (The goal is to build a tall fence so deer can't jump over your barrier.) ... The most natural way to combat this ...

  5. Agricultural fencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_fencing

    Deer and many goats can easily jump an ordinary agricultural fence, and so special fencing is needed for farming goats or deer, or to keep wild deer out of farmland and gardens. Deer fence is often made of lightweight woven wire netting nearly 2 metres (6 feet 7 inches) high on lightweight posts, otherwise made like an ordinary woven wire fence.

  6. Ha-ha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ha-ha

    Comparison of a ha-ha (top) and a regular wall (bottom). Both walls prevent access, but one does not block the view looking outward. A ha-ha (French: hâ-hâ [a a] ⓘ or saut de loup [so dÉ™ lu] ⓘ), also known as a sunk fence, blind fence, ditch and fence, deer wall, or foss, is a recessed landscape design element that creates a vertical barrier (particularly on one side) while preserving ...

  7. List of pest-repelling plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pest-repelling_plants

    They have been used in companion planting as pest control in agricultural and garden situations, and in households. Certain plants have shown effectiveness as topical repellents for haematophagous insects, such as the use of lemon eucalyptus in PMD, but incomplete research and misunderstood applications can produce variable results. [1]