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Rabbits are adorable, but not when they're eating your plants and flowers. This one flower may be attracting rabbits to your yard. Here's what to do about it.
Follow these tips from Owen and Pierce on how to keep hungry rabbits away from your plants and flowers: Be proactive. “The best approach is to prevent a problem before it happens and the animal ...
With all the rainfall, trees and shrubs have had substantial growth. But this lush growth is also appealing to wildlife in the neighborhood.
If you feel like you're seeing rabbits everywhere you turn in the Columbus area, you're not the only one. See what experts ...
A humane way to keep rabbits from wrecking your garden is to surround vulnerable rabbit-favorites with rabbit-deterring plants -- particularly those with a strong smell.
I attended a gardening class in North Carolina. The instructor gave us a handout with a list of 20 “rabbit-resistant plants.” ...
It’s a bit eerie, not to mention disappointing, to walk out to the garden and find some-or all! – of your tomato plants ...
Within the garden, you’ll also find ginkgo, cinnamon, mulberry and countless others that are native to many regions ...
To the Editor: The bunnies are back! The tell signs that they have returned was evident in my flower garden a couple days ago, then we saw one in the backyard.
Walking farther inside, you'll see every inch of this place is covered in bunnies and flowers and all things Easter. And warmer weather this week has shoppers out.
A version of this article appears in print on April 24, 2025, Section D, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: Bunnies, Bonnets and Blooms at the Easter Parade.