Saturday, October 29, 2011

Homemade Raccoon Repellent Options

By Randall O. Davis


While some of us might believe raccoons are harmless, many who endure nightly trash raids from these tiny critters really do not find them to be so adorable, in particular when they manage to scatter the trash throughout our yards. If you happen to be an example of these annoyed people who might be subjected to raccoons in trash, you are probably looking for a type of raccoon deterrent to try to keep these animals away.

You have plenty of options to consider, but if you want a cheap and easy way to repel raccoons, why not consider crafting your own homemade raccoon repellent?

There are many easy and effective ways for you make these with the utilization of some natural foods and household items. Raccoons possess a strong sense of smell, so now the idea is to use ingredients that hav strong or sharp odors that can deter them from coming toward the trash. Below are a handful of the most common repellents that can be made simply and quickly.

Hot Sauce & Dishwashing Detergent

This repellent makes use of hot sauce and dishwashing detergent mixed together to produce a not-so-tasty combination. All you have to do is dump a bottle of hot sauce in 1 gallon of water, include a teaspoon of detergent, mix well and pour inside spray bottle. The detergent becomes a glue of sorts and allows the hot sauce to stick to the places you're spraying. Reapply this raccoon-repelling mixture every day or 2 or after rainfall or watering.

Onions and Peppers

This deterrent utilizes yellow onions, cayenne peppers and jalapenos. For this fragrant concoction, pour one tablespoon of cayenne pepper with a chopped jalapeno and chopped onion into a boiling pot of water and let it simmer for about twenty minutes. The boiling sends the scents from the vegetables into your water. After that, allow the water to cool and strain the mixture into your spray bottle using a cheese cloth or colander. This repellent typically lasts 3 to 5 days before you need to reapply it.

Ammonia

Ammonia is considered a great homemade raccoon repellent because its pungent stench is irritating to raccoons' nose and eyes. Simply soak old rags or towels in ammonia and place them along the inside of the trash can or along the area where you are trying to prevent raccoons from invading.

Keep in mind that this method works best inside the trash can or the enclosed area where you keep the garbage because the air doesn't flow and the stench is stuck for quite some time.

Vinegar

Vinegar works better more because of its taste than its scent. Raccoons are turned off by vinegar's taste, so you should soak discarded foodstuffs like corn cobs in vinegar for a few and lay the items around the garbage. Also, douse the trash container with vinegar so the raccoon connects that nasty taste with all of your garbage.

The previous examples are only a few of the simple techniques used to construct homemade raccoon repellents, but you can always try more recipes that may work for your needs. Keep under consideration that it is wise to use items which possess a really strong or sharp odor, and don't forget to apply the repellent often.

With time you will discover the raccoons will eventually have to concur with you that yes, your trash is truly plain stinky.




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