What are Gophers?
GOPHERS are raking rodents in the Geomyida family found in most of North America. In the garden, Gophers can be devastating inconvenience, and most people treat them as pests using various pest control techniques to solve gofers. These rodents differ in size, with some samples of up to two pounds (almost one kilogram) and are extremely adaptable, which are found in cities and rural areas. The pouch gives the Goprars a bloated look, which makes them very recognizable. Gophers use this case to transport food back to their lard and create significant piles of food. Some people refer to Gophers as "pocket gophers" in reference to this case. They use their very large incisors to dig and have short, tails that they can use to feel the environment behind them, along with small weak eyes, because the vision is not very useful underground. Most gofers have brownish colors and mix with dirt that they call home.
Apparently, the tunnels under the garden or lawn will be a problem, causing a drop in soil and potentially cause people to hurt themselves by circling ankles. Gophers, however, also enjoys eating plants, roots and bulbs very much, and that is where most of the gopher damage is carried out. Once Gophers settles in the garden, plants can destroy in relatively short order, which can be quite frustrating and depressing for gardeners.
There are a number of ways to deal with Gophers. Many people like to use GoPher traps, using the small hills produced by Gophers when they appear to find their tunnels, and then insert the bait traps into the hole. Some Guards also compress Gopher's hills in an effort to capture them under the ground before the openings or inserting flares that create large smokes and potentially suffocate gophery. Some gardeners also use poison even if it is not recommended because poisons can potentially zrAnit animals that precede the goals.
Sometimes it helps to call a pest control society that has industrial forces tools to solve the problem. It can also help in the garden in elevated beds protected below it, and the gardeners sometimes also plant the boundary of Gopher Spurge, a plant that radiates a milk sap that Gophers obviously does not like.