TOMNGIAMOM said:
There are mixed reviews on the motion sensor sprinkler and motion sensored lights but if I do not do something soon they will take over. any help is appreciated.
Thanks
This may be of help.... We are located in deep woods, surrounded on three sides by Protected Habitat, i.e. State Park, Town Park, and Audubon Society lands. Off the back of my house is a 30' X 30' Trex deck that is surrounded on two sides by our wild area. The "yard" drops off abruptly at house so that end of deck is at mid tree level. IG Pool is very near and is also pier and beam on deep end where the decline starts at about mid pool lengthwise. "Wild Area" starts just a few feet beyond end of pool. We feed hundreds of birds with feeders hanging off two sides of deck.
We also, intentionally, feed critters as a necessity. Otherwise they wreak havoc with feeders, even the heaviest, most squirrel proof feeder, hanging several feet out from deck on very heavy metal brackets.
I've never seen any signs of critters using pool except for squirrels drinking out of it during day.
We feed the squirrels by day with Squirrelogs (compressed ground corn) and critter food spread on corner of deck. Otherwise they continuously mess with the feeders. Until this spring I brought the Squirrelogs in at night to keep the 'coons and 'possums from totally devouring them at night. This, obviously, encouraged them to mess with the feeders at night..see on down, sometimes emptying several during the night. One morning, this spring, I discovered two of my very heavy metal hangers (3' long hanging out at 45 degrees from metal rail) bent all the way down with expensive metal feeders down the hill and major bent up. These metal hangers are really, really heavy and sturdy. About that time I observed the largest coon I have ever seen hanging around the trees by deck. My closest neighbor confirmed that this coon could be considered a GIANT as he had seen him several times and had never seen one nearly this big. He was probably the culprit for the hanger/feeder damage.
We decided to start leaving one Squirrelog out at night. This eased the bird feeder "stress" somewhat. Then we added a bit of critter food (corn, sunflower, peanuts in shell), on deck, at night, and now about a cup of dog food on deck at night.
Result is that they seem to be leaving the feeders alone now. And we really enjoy watching them. They have become so "tame" that they do not even startle and scamper when hubby and/or I go out on deck, as long as the dogs don't come with us.
So, earlier in summer I was adding more low voltage lighting in and around deck (You don't walk outside here without a flashlight, at night, because of the "domesticated"

copperheads, rattlesnakes, and corals that "love" us. Feeding birds and critters main disadvantage is drawing in rats and that draw in snakes.

). (Oh, the joys of maintaining our love of birding.

) I set up bright floodlights, while working, pointed right at the Squirrelog location. Lights didn't even phase the raccoons who continued to eat even when I was working just a few feet right below them. This was pretty early in our night time feeding but the critters were used to us sitting in spa located near them. I have pretty bright LED motion lights attached all around the spa shell and had been earlier (before leaving food out for them) observing them (LED lights popping on) walking around the deck scavenging while I was in the spa at wee hours of a.m.
We've gone several months now with no damage to feeders or other marauding behaviors from critters.
:blah: :blah: :blah: Points I'm attempting to make.
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If you live close to or in woods/forest you probably won't be able to keep others from coming if you remove some. Also, I've read that relocating wild animals can be a death sentence for them.
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If you can't keep them away giving them another source of food/water may stop their using your pool. We also have a heavy concrete bird bath on deck that is always filled with fresh water.
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Bright lights don't seem to bother the raccoons. Before I got the two LED floods setup and aimed at the 'coon tree hubby frequently stepped out on deck and flashed one of his brightest super lights at them. This didn't seem to bother them. The 'possums are a little more skittish but not much.
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Large dogs peeing all over the place doesn't seem to discourage 'coons and 'possums. Until just past few years we have always kept 6-10 Large and GIANT house-dogs that had 24/7 access to that yard/deck. That never seemed to discourage the critters from coming in. In past year we lost our last geriatric Mastiff and two geriatric Rotties. So we now have two Labradoodles and one Mastiff puppy. Their activity (lots) doesn't deter the critters but these guys don't have 24/7 access to the yard yet but they do have 24/7 access to the front fenced yard. Fence between two yards is about 4' from main critter tree. Our dedicated, Super Ratter, Rottie girl, who kept vigilant watch over the deck for 12 years, occasionally bringing in dead or critically injured rats, 'coons, 'possums, an occasional dove, and sometimes bunnies, didn't seem to discourage critter activity.
We have plenty of Bobcats all around. Occasionally, some neighbor will report females having litters under their houses or porches. And we have plenty of large, healthy, well fed coyotes that are pretty used to human presence. I see them often and hear them every night. Also, plenty, large of healthy foxes.

unkrock: Everything is bigger in Texas, ya know.
Best advice is to find ways to "work with them".
geekgranny