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Shake-Away Fox Urine Powder blends the
effectiveness of fox urine with our patent-pending powder formula, to create the
safest, simplest, most effective, 100% organic method to keep pesky animals
away. Fox urine powder works longer, smells stronger, and won't soak into the
ground, evaporate or freeze like liquid fox urine.
SUGGESTED USES:
Create a misleading image that foxes are present -- this helps direct chipmunks,
squirrels, groundhogs, mice, moles, possum, raccoons, rabbits, shrew, rats,
skunk, voles and woodchucks away, as the odor of a fox is a danger signal to
them.
DIRECTIONS: Sprinkle along the perimeter of
your lawn, bushes, trees, gardens or flowerbeds. Reapply twice a week or after
rain or snow. Store in a cool dry area. Shake well before each use. To prolong
life due to rain or evaporation, use it in a Garden Scentry repellent container.
20oz. container is only $17.95
Testimonials
"I was having a terrible time with small
animals in my flowerbeds. I heard about your SHAKE-AWAY Fox Urine Powder product
through a friend, and from the first day I used your product, the animals stayed
away. Thanks for the great product."
M S, Pennsylvania
"We used your coyote odor product to keep the deer out of our sweet corn. We
were quite pleased with the results, the deer stayed out. I will continue to use
your great product."
C B, New York
"... your SHAKE-AWAY Fox Urine Powder works very well. I've seen only one
squirrel since I applied the powder. I'm very happy about that! We've had many
many squirrels this year and last. They have been invading my small garden,
consuming even tomatoes and blueberries! Thanks for a product that really
works!"
JV, Georgia
Scientific Research
There has been much research in regards to how deer and rodents react to the
smell of predator odor. Many studies have proven that scent-repellents with
predator odor prove to be most effective. These studies state that " these
aromas (predator odor) indicate to a prey animal, that because a predator might
be nearby, the prey should not stay"
Case Studies
Scientists in Colorado tested the repellency of many items on tame mule deer.
They found that the odor of "coyote urine worked best at deterring and
preventing deer from feeding."
In 1991 R.K. Swihart and his colleagues examined the average response of
whitetail deer to predator and non-predator odors. The whitetail deer reacted
strongly to the odor of " coyote urine."
T.P. Sullivan and his colleagues studied the use of predator odor as repellents
to reduce feeding damage by blacktail deer in British Columbia. The study's
results indicated, quote "all predator odors worked well as repellents."