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Old June 2, 2016   #1
OzoneNY
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Default something is feeding on fruit

my next door neighbor is losing fruit to something. 3 of them look like rodent damage but this first one looks like perhaps a worm?
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Old June 2, 2016   #2
Bulldog
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I vote squirrels.
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Old June 2, 2016   #3
Tracydr
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Birds?
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Old June 2, 2016   #4
ginger2778
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Squirrels if daytime, Rats if overnight. Both are very attracted to peanut butter to use in a trap. I personally can't bring myself to kill, so I use a have a heart trap. (No judgements on those who do kill.)
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Old June 2, 2016   #5
Dewayne mater
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What Ginger said. Also, that first one could be bird damage as they tend to do damage with the beaks and that damage looks like bird damage. For me, birds have produced small amounts of harm that I can live with. Rats and squirrels on the other hand can wipe out a lot of tomatoes in a short time. Irritatingly, they never finish the job, just do some damage, move on to another one and do more damage. Most people have no problem with rat control because they understand the wide array of damage they do and that they can even play host to diseases, fleas and even bite people. I find it helps to think of squirrels as extremely cute rats, but, still rats, and deal with them accordingly.

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Old June 2, 2016   #6
ContainerTed
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Look for lost foliage if you suspect a hornworm. My vote is for some kind of rodent. Squirrels, rabbits, and groundhogs come to mind. But some of that damage might be birds. Blue Jays, mockingbirds, crows, and starlings would be on my suspect list. Last year, I had a rabbit do a little damage, but I never did catch him.


Edited to add: I've had o'possums and skunks eat tomatoes in the past. Not in a while, though.
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Old June 2, 2016   #7
decherdt
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We move around a decoy snake for the Mockingbirds and keep suet in a cage on a tree for jays, squirrels, and wood peckers, with water for all, but it seems like every year some new squirrel has to take a bite of 6 tomatoes just to make sure that suet really is better. Our local Mockingbirds focus on tomatoes more in the Fall than the Spring.
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Old June 4, 2016   #8
b54red
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Rats and or squirrels. Better stop them quick or they can do a lot of damage. Once they find the fruit they keep coming back til you get rid of them. One year during a drought the squirrels ate half my tomatoes before I got them under control and I had out around a 100 plants. Some days I couldn't find a blushing fruit that hadn't been chewed on. It seems that they pass the word of the wonderful buffet available and soon the number of critters feeding got out of hand. Pellet rifle for squirrels and poison for rats. If it is rats they will also eat your bell peppers every night until you kill them.

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Old June 5, 2016   #9
SeniorTomate
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Yep since I live in the city I use a BB gun for the rodents. I didn't want to use poison since we have a lot of Hawks around here and I didn't want to effect them.

Last edited by SeniorTomate; June 5, 2016 at 01:49 PM. Reason: Clarafiction
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Old June 5, 2016   #10
ChiliPeppa
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I put ladies knee high stockings over the larger ripening fruit.
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Old June 5, 2016   #11
Cheryl2017
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The squirrels in my yard eat right through stocking/hose. Lol
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Old June 6, 2016   #12
brownrexx
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You have different critters in Texas than I do in PA but if it were here, I would say groundhog and once the plants get bigger, they can't reach the tomatoes. I use 5' tall tomato cages.
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