The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Community => Coffee Lounge => Topic started by: Ghdp on February 18, 2017, 04:57:27 pm
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I have so many molehills in my paddock. (Conwy) It looks as if my most of my neighbours are having the same problem. Are there more this year than usual? My immediate neighbour grazes my paddock with his sheep and so I am not suffering any particular losses but should I be doing something about them? If so, what is the going rate for a mole catcher?
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Round our way, £7 to £9 per mole depending on the terrain.
That sounds like a lot, but actually our friend who 'does the mole' reckons a good week is one where he makes minimum wage.
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Funny you should say that!
We always have a good many but are particularly well off for them this year ::) Mid Wales
Have spent a happy hour this afternoon with my daughter, collecting them up for some big veg pots that we are trying out this year.
Our neighbour did give my son some mole catching lessons but he wasn't a good pupil and caught none!
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Masses this year .... barely a gap between the moles hills in one paddock .... but here in Wales I try to think of them as drainage diggers!!!
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Apart I suppose from reduced grazing for a while can they cause problems for sheep? Thought I read somewhere about a disease that.could be caused by organisms in disturbed earth?
I try to look at them positively, maybe breaking up the waterlogged soil. ???
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My OH is setting traps on a neighbouring farm. 34 moles caught since Christmas.
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By turning up the earth, moles expose sheep to ingesting soil and this in turn can lead to listeriosis. Also, if there are moles in the lambing field, for some reason ewes are irresistably drawn to dumping their newborn lambs onto the hills. So you have a filthy muddy lamb, which even its mum doesn't want to lick. A very heavily pregnant ewe can, especially on a slope, roll over a molehill and be left stuck and unable to get up - here 'cowped'.
It's surprising how few moles it takes to cause a whole lot of hills.
If you have a shotgun, one way to get them is to creep up to the freshest molehill. Wait until you see the soil moving then fire straight down the hole.
Dogs can dig them out if they have patience and can wait until the mole is just about at the surface.
If you're going to use mole traps, make sure you rub them in soil and leave them to age for a bit before using them. Then don't handle them with your hands, as moles have an excellent sense of smell. The man who showed us how to do it, always wore the same manky old pair of rubber gloves to handle the traps and to lift out the dead moles. Don't forget to mark where you've buried the traps.
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Lots here too; I had thought that I was being invaded from my neighbour (who seems to have lost the battle on his side) but maybe it's just this year.
I was thinking of asking on here for recommendations for mole traps just today, as the two scissor traps I've been using are not enough. Also I've got a particularly wily one that just won't fall for the scissor trap.
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Not good to bale them into your haylage or hay either.
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Of course having lots of moles shows that you have good, fertile soil. The moles are there to catch earthworms. Modern farm practices such as frequent mechanical work and the use of pesticides reduce worm populations drastically, so fewer moles. Good rich soil which has had plenty of muck on and no pesticides, or organically managed ancient pasture, will encourage earthworms, and so moles. I'd rather have the moles than no worms :garden: