Moles voles and groundhogs are often confused with one another because they all burrow beneath the ground.
Moles and voles in yard.
Others are more fortunate.
Lawn moles and voles are difficult to get rid of.
With two completely different diets.
Ground moles will not eat plants or the roots of plants.
However while moles tend to make large holes like groundhogs do because they excavate soil they often don t leave the lawn.
Moles are insectivores and exist solely to eat insects.
Bury 1 4 inch hardware cloth in an 18 inch trench and tilt the bottom 4 inches at a 90 degree angle away from the yard to discourage animals from tunneling.
Although they are often confused as one in the same ground moles and voles are two entirely different animals.
After catching one or two the problem seems to go away.
An underground barrier around the perimeter of your yard can do just that.
Commonly when one animal leaves or is caught another arrives to take its place.
The best way to get rid of moles and voles is to keep them away from your lawn and garden in the first place.
Complete lawn mole extermination may not be possible especially if other people around you are also experiencing a mole problem.
Moles aren t the only troublesome garden pests.
Voles can devour your flower bulbs munch on the roots of your carrots potatoes and other root vegetables damage your trees and shrubs eat your grass and leave well worn paths through your yard.