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I planted a lot of tulips a couple of years ago and go one lousy tulip. Did they eat them?

2007-10-25 12:10:52 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

9 answers

IN short....YES!....so will squirrels, chipmunks, deer.
There are products on the market that you can incorporate into the ground or dip the bulbs in before planting that are suppose to protect them.
IO have never used any of these products so I can't recommend them.
I am sure garden centers sell a wide variety, and I hope some one on answers has had personal experience that works for you. Good Luck

2007-10-25 12:17:18 · answer #1 · answered by bugsie 7 · 0 1

In a word, no, it wasn't moles. Moles are insectivores. In fact some bulbs, certainly daffodils, repel them (I don't know about tulips). I put in rows of daffodil bulbs along some of my boundaries a year ago, and this has halved the number of moles that have come through into my garden this year. Your problem may be plant-eating animals - mice, slugs, insects - or it may be just a bad batch of bulbs. Have you tried digging up some of the bulbs to see what state they are in? Maybe wait until spring to see whether they finally come up!

2007-10-29 22:33:29 · answer #2 · answered by Sangmo 5 · 0 0

Safely & Permanently Remove Moles, Warts and Skin Blemishes

2016-05-17 16:06:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

going to assert moles or voles yet they many times consume them underground--your's have been dug up so undecided. IF it relatively is a mole, you will discover out by utilising strolling around & your ft will sink the place there is an underground tunnel. if so, it relatively is many times in basic terms one or 2 & U in basic terms unfold diazinon on your backyard b4 a rain to kill the grubworms they ceremonial dinner directly to get rid of them. For dug up bulbs, ??? i might examine with my associates to confirm in the event that they have a similar difficulty & from time to time human beings will certainly SEE the varmint (might desire to be squirrel,canine, cat, possum, beaver, deer). That way you will possibly properly be conscious of what sort of catch/poison/deterrent to set out. until you paintings it out, you will possibly set out reflective pie pans or products of mylar, shiney issues, or noisy issues that mirror the solar or make noise in the wind to startle them----- AND the terrific scientific care is to plant your bulbs wrapped in rooster twine (low priced) (get at lowe's, domicile depot, or a feed-furnish shop) and that they'll flow away your bulbs by myself. (It has a pair of million" great areas so your plant can definitely poke via & upward thrust above floor point.)

2016-10-14 01:18:08 · answer #4 · answered by olmeda 4 · 0 0

It wasn't a mole it was most likely a mouse.....I understand that the moles make the tunnels and field mice have a feast...I have started to plant mine in plastic pots........It works for most ..However some mice are relentless and are eating the bottoms out of some of my pots........I have friends that use clay pots..........And they seem to work also....Good Luck

2007-10-25 15:01:27 · answer #5 · answered by caseyjones 2 · 0 1

Grubs eat bulbs and roots. Moles eat grubs. Neither are desireable to have around. your local nursery has what you need to get rid of both.

2007-10-25 12:53:16 · answer #6 · answered by normy in garden city 6 · 0 1

No fortunately they only eat bugs, but they can turn your yard into an ankle breaker.

2007-10-25 12:20:47 · answer #7 · answered by B C 4 · 0 1

Not likely, but other critters may have- armadillos will dig and eat them, for instance.

2007-10-25 13:53:25 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Yep.

2007-10-25 12:24:13 · answer #9 · answered by Deborah S 5 · 0 0

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