How Do Business Magazines Address Global...
Business & Finance3 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by cotswoldston. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Post them to paulineward - she has a snail problem and h/hogs are just what she needs....or failing that, check fences and hedges and block any lifted wire fences, or push chicken wire into gaps in a hedge. Only a physical barrier can really stop them getting in.
Hedgehogs are good for the garden though as they control pests that would be a lot worse than scuffing the lawn like leatherjackets and beetle larvae. Are you sure its not badgers doing this though or have you seen the hedgehogs at it? - the area you state seems quite a size and badgers will do this sort of 'grubbing for insects' in turf quite happily.
Most gardeners try to attract h/hogs for the benefit of pest control. One possible soulution is in fact to make your lawn more healthy - maybe relay the turf - this will remove the insects that are attracting the h/hogs or badgers as it will remove the food source - do not put down poisonous fertilisers for the grass though or use similar to kill slugs, etc in the grass as the h/hogs will eat the insects and be poisoned as well - then you get the wrath of the hog lovers descending.
And useless fact - h/hogs are one of the most primitive mammals, with records of similar creatures going back to the dinosaurs period.
If you are a gardener why would you want to be rid of the hedgeogs? They get rid of snails and slugs that will eat your plants. Like suggested before I would put food out for them, check your fences and look to another animal that has caused this damage. If you think about it the size of the damage done is far too large to be a hedgehog anyway. Could you not sit up one night and watch for whoever is the real culprit?