Non-Violent, Wind-Powered Gopher Repeller | ||
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I live on a 10-acre farm. It is mostly orchards of fruit trees. Gophers
are everywhere. My small garden was constantly under attack at first. And
I counter-attacked, killing two gophers and one mole with rose-baited
traps (trick I learnt from my father). But I didn't like killing the cute
little guys and I only got 'em after they had already damaged something.
It would be better to just make them avoid the garden. I did this the
old-fashioned way by making a whirl-a-gig. The theory is that gophers like quiet, still gardens. Whirl-a-gigs send
vibrations down into the ground as the blades turn. The rodents can't
stand it and leave. I have two in my garden. I made them both out of scrap material. I cut
coffee cans into propellers by using tin snips to cut three blades down
the sides, bending them outwards, and punching a nail in the center of the
can's bottom. I twisted the blades into about a 30 degree angle. Hammer
the nail into the nose of a stick, leaving room for the blade to rotate.
Hold it up and blow on it. It should turn freely. Attach a tail fin. I
used another coffee can, cut open and smoothed out, to nail onto it.
Balance the assembly on your finger tip to find the balance point. I use a
power drill and a 3/16 bit to get a nice straight hole. Then put a nail
through it to your post. It should track the wind easily and turn in a
breeze. The more noises, squeaks, and rattles, the better. Feel the post
to check the vibrations it sends down into the ground. Each whirl-a-gig is
different, with it's own noises and personality. This simple design will work for a few months, but constant motion will
eventually make it crack up. I improved it after every repair. First, I
added washers to every axis. Then I used a bolt for the propeller shaft as
the nails kept getting sawed through by the coffee can blade assembly.
Then I used a steel vegetable can instead of an aluminum coffee can for
the blades.
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