🌿 Keep your garden safe and sound with Liquid Fence!
Liquid Fence Deer and Rabbit Repellent Granular is a 5-pound pack (4 total) designed to protect your low-growing vegetation from deer and rabbits. Its unique scent repels these animals without harming your plants or pets, making it a safe and effective solution for year-round garden protection.
A**N
Horrifyingly Effective
Liquid Fence won't just keep Deer and Rabbits out of your garden; it will keep every kind of animal with a nose out of your garden. In fact, YOU may want to avoid your garden after using it, because it absolutely reeks.The ingredients include "Putrescent Egg Solids" (and some Garlic), but that doesn't seem like a sufficient explanation for the foul and horrid stench that comes off this stuff. It brings to mind much nastier things, like rotting fish, or vomit, or skunks… or maybe the Devil's sweaty underwear after a long day of torturing sinners. I mean, seriously, it is the most sickening thing you are likely to ever smell.That is exactly why it works so well, though. No sane animal will want to go anywhere near your garden after you use this.For the best results, use these dry granules at first, when your plants are still relatively low to the ground. But then when they start to get bigger, use the actual *liquid* Liquid Fence, so you can mist it all over the leaves. (And be sure to always spray downwind from yourself, because you do NOT want the stuff blowing back into your face.)Also, note that your money will go further if you buy the concentrate version, and mix it yourself. Just avoid breathing through your nose while you do it, and be aware that whatever spray bottle you use will forever be contaminated with the stench.
D**S
Works really well...maybe too well!
I bought this stuff to repel rabbits from eating my plants in my vegetable and flower garden. I bought the liquid first, but it didn't seem to work that great and ran out quickly. I switched to the granules and bought a big container and that seems to work better. It also lasts a lot longer. I also use cayenne pepper and garlic powder so the rabbits don't get accustomed to smelling the same thing all the time. So far, it seems to work very well.The granules are about the same consistency as kitty litter, but they smell a lot worse. I would advise not sticking your nose in the container, especially when you first open it. The stuff is mostly made out of rotten eggs, but the granules smell more like fresh dog do-do to me. And whatever you do, keep the lid closed tight, because the smell seems to penetrate every nook and cranny of the place you store it in. Nothing is worse than having a garage that smells like a pack of wild dogs with explosive diarrhea. Other than that little problem, the stuff works fantastic.
C**E
Best product to deter deer and rabbits.
Absolutely love this product! We have tried many things to deter the deer and rabbits from my flower gardens and these granules are the only thing that work. We sprinkle a light coating around the plants they like and it lasts about 3 weeks or more. The smell is very strong so I wouldn’t store this inside a house. The scent fades outside in about 24-48 hours to be tolerable to be around. With the great success we have using this, I highly recommend it!
P**Y
Not satisfactory rabbit repellent. Need a real fence.
After I found a leak in a gallon of Liquid Fence that kept it from spraying, I tried pouring some into a utility spray bottle and spraying my front-yard petunias. For a week the petunias were not eaten, even though I had seen rabbits afoot. Then they were eaten until only a single stem per plant remained.I got the granules in the hope it would be easier to apply. However, it is not granules but clumpy powder. I applied it to what remained of the petunias, and a few bloomed, only to then get eaten down again. I tried the powder at places where rabbits were coming under my backyard fence to no avail. Finally I used floral netting to block the spaces under the fence and between panels, and I saw no more evidence of rabbits in the backyard.I have interacted with rabbits in my back yard in in my walks in the neighborhood to learn what I can about them. My conclusion is that a hungry rabbit will not give up getting something to eat. It will ignore the odor of the liquid fence to get to food. It will not run away unless something is moving toward it, and then it will move very quickly to high grass or bushes or a hole in a wall, wherever is the nearest, there to hide and wait.The only thing to keep hungry rabbits away from flowers they like is a real fence. It must be sealed at the ground to prevent the rabbit from squeezing under it; it must be sealed at all junctions to keep the rabbit from squeezing through. The ravenous rabbits are typically small, and they can squeeze through really small spaces. Also the fence must be high. I have seen a rabbit jump at least 3 feet vertically into a large pot of flowers.The other approach is to have plants that rabbits do not like to eat, even if the plants are not pretty.
D**N
It works very well so far
We have loads of deer due to a Florida state park next to us, I in turn, have tons of flowers. I have always used the spray and it works well if you remember to spray the new blossoms when they appear, this new powder is great (I assume they have just started making this in powder form as it's the first year I have seen it). I sprinkle it lightly around my garden and in front of my container plants and the deer haven't gone near any of them yet (of course, I say "yet"). It seems to really work and since I still see it on the ground after a rain I assume it's still working. We've had several days of rain lately so I will reapply in the next day to two, but if you have a lot of time and money invested in your flower gardens, you might want to try this. I cannot speak about veggies,as I only grow flowers.
J**.
Not good enough
I would have given this 5 stars within a month after starting to use it in May. At first it worked terrifically, after the initial attack on my newly planted cherry and apple trees, I used Liquid Fence and there was nothing for another 6 weeks with bi-weekly sprayings. But... By the end of the summer they were ignoring it and continued to munch on branches and leaves. I have pretty high neighborhood dear pressure. For context, this is an all suburban area where there is no hunting so they are quite Fearless and travel in groups but in order to save the trees I was forced to fence them in with welded wire fencing and 8ft posts. It simply isn't effective enough in my area. I tried it as a Japanese Beetle deterrent and I actually think it might have been somewhat effective.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 weeks ago