How To Keep Groundhogs Away - Today's Homeowner (2024)

Groundhogs go by many names, such as woodchucks, marmots, land beavers, and “whistle pigs.” And from a distance, with their small, stout bodies and birdsong-like whistles, it can be understandable why many people enjoy having them around. Unfortunately, these large rodents are a troublesome nuisance pest that can cause serious damage to lawns, gardens, and even the structure of your house. In this guide, we’ll go over everything you need to know about how to keep groundhogs away, including preventative measures and trapping.

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What Are Groundhogs?

A groundhog, or by its scientific name, Marmota monax, is a species of land-dwelling rodent belonging to the Sciuridae family. While there are about 14 species of marmot found in the United States and Canada, the groundhog is the most widespread. They’re found in the Eastern half of the United States, with a distribution ranging from Eastern Alaska all the way down to North Carolina. They possess many habitats, ranging from low shrublands to forest edges, roadsides, plains, bushy woodlands, river banks, and even in and around human dwellings.

Appearing similar, albeit much smaller, to a beaver, a groundhog is a large rodent with a wide, stocky body up to 2 feet in length with yellowish-brown to black fur. It can weigh up to 14 pounds with small, dark eyes, a long, well-furred tail, and sizable teeth. It gets its most common colloquial name, “whistle pig,” from the sharp, shrill whistle it produces when it detects danger. This whistle is commonly mistaken for birdsong. Its tracks are unique and easy to spot, spaced about 4 inches to a foot apart, with four toes on the front paw, and five on the rear.

Are Groundhogs Dangerous?

Groundhogs are a pest species that, much like mice, have become remarkably adapted to human presences and urban environments. As a result, groundhogs are less hesitant to invade lawns, gardens, roadways, and small suburbs next to their natural habitats. Thankfully, groundhogs are quite skittish, preferring to whistle a warning to nearby marmots and dart inside their dens than face a confrontation with humans.

While groundhogs will bite if cornered, they’re not known to be aggressive and not typically confrontational. However, they can carry ticks, fleas, and rabies. While rabies cases in groundhogs are rare, it can happen, and animals, when infected with this disease, can act erratically and with increased hostility.

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Furthermore, when transmitted to humans, this disease is fatal if not treated immediately. So if you spot a groundhog acting strangely, don’t approach it and immediately contact wildlife control or a professional pest management company.

What Do Woodchucks Eat?

While the physical and medical threat posed by groundhogs is relatively small, they’ll cause serious problems for your lawn, garden, and home. Groundhogs are primarily herbivores that seek out any available plant life to chow down on once they have established a burrow.

They like soft, tender plants like grasses, roots, leaves, bushes, fruit, and especially clover as food sources.

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They’re also known to rarely eat small grubs, insects, snails, and slugs.

Groundhogs will destroy landscaping plants like trees by chewing on their bark and roots. They’ll eat ornamental plants like ferns, bushes, and flowers. But the biggest problem with these pests is that they consume just about anything in a garden, including:

  • Celery
  • Carrots
  • Corn
  • Peas
  • Leafy greens
  • Alfalfa
  • Peas
  • Various berries
  • Squash
  • Eggplant
  • Broccoli
  • Fruit trees
  • Cherries
  • Pears

How To Identify Groundhogs

Identifying if you have a groundhog problem is not usually hard. Groundhogs are diurnal (meaning they’re active during the day) and can usually be found scurrying around their burrows. They’re most active during the early hours or close to dusk but typically scavenge throughout the day. Groundhogs hibernate from November through February, so you’ll only spot them from March through October.

Some common signs of groundhog activity include:

  • A shrill, high-pitched whistle in the early hours of the morning or evening
  • Gnawed, half-eaten, or otherwise damaged plants
  • 10-inch to 1-foot wide groundhog holes located around trees, sheds, or your foundation
    • These are the entrances to their burrows and are often accompanied by small mounds of thrown dirt
  • Bumpy, uneven, and hole-filled lawns
  • Spotting the groundhog while it’s out and about

How To Keep Groundhogs Away From Your Lawn and Vegetable Garden

The best way to keep groundhogs out of your garden and lawn is through good prevention strategies. Below we go over some of the best ways to keep groundhogs away from your property in the first place.

A simple into-the-ground fence is the most effective, safest, and cheapest way to keep groundhogs out. Install a fence made from sturdy chicken wire or thick mesh-woven wire fencing that extends at least 3 feet off the ground and 10 inches to 1 foot deep. This way, burrowing pests like groundhogs, gophers, voles, and moles won’t be able to climb above or dig below the fence.

While groundhogs will eat a wide variety of veggies, there are some that these massive rodents find repulsive. You can help deter groundhogs by growing these plants along the edge of your property and within your garden. Here is a quick list of some of the most common and popular groundhog-resistant plants:

Garden Plants:

  • Lavender
  • Chives
  • Fennel
  • Garlic
  • Thyme

Ornamental Plants:

  • Butterfly weed
  • Coneflower
  • Delphinium
  • Snapdragon
  • Yarrow
  • Baby’s breath
  • Daffodil
  • Fountain grass
  • Iris
  • Peonies
  • Dianthus

Groundhogs are sizable critters but still have several dangerous predators, like foxes, coyotes, hawks, and owls. Like most small mammals, groundhogs use tall grass, shrubs, and dens to help protect themselves from these hunting animals. You should make your yard as unappealing as possible by keeping it trimmed, neat, and tidy. We recommend:

  • Regularly trimming your grass
  • Keeping the lawn clear of piles of trash and debris
  • Removing leaf litter and other plant debris promptly
  • Clearing away brush piles

While adopting a dog is a steep investment just for pest control, it’s an effective way to keep groundhogs out of your property. Groundhogs perceive dogs as potential predators and will avoid locations that have them. By adopting a dog, installing a fence, and allowing your pup to run around your property, you’ll have an anti-groundhog defense system.

How To Get Rid of Groundhogs Under a Shed

One of the most common and frustrating places for groundhogs to inhabit is under your shed. Groundhogs like to create burrows next to tall objects, like trees or, in this case, sheds. Once they get to digging, they can create tunnel systems sizable enough to cause major damage to your lawn. Worse yet, if your shed has a built-in foundation, groundhog tunnels can cause shifting and displacement if left unattended.

What follows are some of the most effective methods for getting rid of a groundhog under a shed.

A live catch-and-release groundhog trap is a preferred way to handle these pesky varmints. Using these traps takes time, precaution, and know-how, but their reliability is worth it. You’ll want to start with a heavy set of rubber gloves – wear these when baiting and placing the trap, as doing so without them can get your scent on it. Next, place bait inside the trap, any combination of fruit and leafy greens works, but groundhogs particularly love cantaloupe and apples. Place the trap within reasonable proximity to the groundhog’s den, then check twice daily, once at dusk and dawn. Once the groundhog is trapped, carefully place it into your vehicle and drive it between five to 10 miles from your home. Ideally, release it in a wooded area or large, grassy field.

Keep in mind that certain states have strict laws and regulations regarding the baiting and trapping of wildlife. Always check your local ordinances before placing traps of any kind. You can always contact your local wildlife control office if you’re unsure of local hunting and trapping laws.

While unpleasant to deal with, animal repellant or predator (fox, large cat, or dog) urine is an effective deterrent for groundhogs. Once they get a whiff, they’ll typically head for the hills. You can purchase these products at most big-box stores or sporting goods retailers.

Another clever way to use scents to repel groundhogs is with garlic and cayenne. Groundhogs hate the smell of these pungent spices, and when applied directly to their burrows, it will incentivize them to find better, less spicy lodgings.

Here is a handy recipe for a groundhog-repelling garlic spray:

  1. Add two large garlic cloves to a food processor
  2. Add 2 tablespoons of cayenne pepper to the food processor
  3. Mix until reduced to a rough paste
  4. Add the paste to 2 cups of water
  5. Let sit overnight
  6. Strain through a fine mesh strainer or cheesecloth
  7. Add an additional 5 cups of water to the mixture
  8. Add 2 tablespoons of dish soap to the mixture
  9. Add mixture to spray bottle

This liquid solution should then be applied to the groundhog burrow once every few days. Apply a light spritzing around the exterior of the groundhog burrow entrance; you don’t need a lot of this stuff to be effective. Furthermore, you can spray any plants you want to protect from the groundhog. Anything coated in this mixture will deter it from taking a bite, and as a nice bonus, this spray also works as an effective pesticide for numerous garden pests.

Other DIY solutions commonly found online include Epsom salt, talcum powder, mothballs, soiled kitty litter, or castor oil. While many of these products are effective in scaring groundhogs aw

The last groundhog repellent is odd, but it has been proven effective. Like coyotes, dogs, cats, and large birds, humans are considered a predator of groundhogs. One of the most effective ways to spread a consistent amount of human scent around their burrows is by sprinkling a modest amount of human hair. Do this once every few days, and your groundhog should get the message and find a new home.

Final Tips on Groundhog Control

While a groundhog may be cute, it’s a pest that can destroy your yard, shift your shed’s foundation, and ravage your garden. Thankfully, there are plenty of tricks and techniques that you can use to keep this pesky marmot at bay.

Remember that when dealing with a groundhog, it’s a wild animal and will attack if backed into a corner. If you can’t manage groundhog removal on your own, you should always contact a professional pest control company or wildlife service.

Furthermore, if you spot a groundhog or any wild animal acting erratically, you should immediately contact animal control or a wildlife service, as it could be infected with rabies.

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Fun Groundhog Facts

  • Groundhogs are the largest member of the chipmunk and ground squirrel family, Sciuridae.
  • Baby groundhogs are called pups, kits, or “chucklings.”
  • Groundhogs have an incredibly short gestation period for mammals, only having pregnancies of one month before delivering litters of two to six.
  • Groundhogs are one of the few mammal species that enter a true state of hibernation, sleeping from November to February.
  • The first Groundhog Day took place in 1887 at Gobbler’s Knob in Punxsutawney; the celebration traces its roots to a German and English holiday called Candlemas. Candlemas is when clergy members bless and distribute candles representing how long winter would last.
  • Groundhogs were not the original animals for Candlemas. Germans expanded upon the Candlemas traditions by adding a hedgehog to predict the weather. When they immigrated to the Americas, they brought the tradition with them but switched to groundhogs because they were more easily found.
  • Punxsutawney Phil, the titular marmot meteorologist of Groundhog Day, has an accuracy of about 39%.

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Sam Wasson

Staff Writer

Sam Wasson graduated from the University of Utah with a degree in Film and Media Arts with an Emphasis in Entertainment Arts and Engineering. Sam brings over four years of content writing and media production experience to the Today’s Homeowner content team. He specializes in the pest control, landscaping, and moving categories. Sam aims to answer homeowners’ difficult questions by providing well-researched, accurate, transparent, and entertaining content to Today’s Homeowner readers.

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Lora Novak meticulously proofreads and edits all commercial content for Today’s Homeowner to guarantee that it contains the most up-to-date information. Lora brings over 12 years of writing, editing, and digital marketing expertise. She’s worked on thousands of articles related to heating, air conditioning, ventilation, roofing, plumbing, lawn/garden, pest control, insurance, and other general homeownership topics.

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How To Keep Groundhogs Away - Today's Homeowner (2024)

FAQs

How do I get rid of groundhogs permanently? ›

Sprinkle granular repellents near a groundhog's burrow and also around your garden to form a barrier, or spray them on plants to make them distasteful. Human hair, pet fur and used kitty litter may also work, along with electronic spikes that use sound or vibration and motion-activated sprinklers. Mimic predators.

What is the best repellent for groundhogs? ›

Groundhogs dislike the smell of red pepper, cayenne pepper, lavender and garlic. Sprinkle dried versions of one or more of these around and in any burrows you find in your yard.

What smell do groundhogs hate the most? ›

Groundhogs have sensitive noses, so use that to your advantage. Groundhogs detest the scent of garlic, lavender, basil, chives, lemon balm, mint, sage, thyme, rosemary, and oregano. They do not like the smell and sting of cayenne pepper.

What is groundhogs worst enemy? ›

The primary predators of groundhogs are hawks, foxes, coyotes, bobcats, dogs and humans. However, motorized vehicles kill many groundhogs each year.

What does Epsom salt do to groundhogs? ›

Epsom salts are one of the best natural ways to discourage groundhogs from your yard. However, it is not the only solution that will protect your greenery without harming the rodent. John recommends growing unpalatable plants, such as wormwood, hot peppers, or catmint – a purple flowering plant with a minty scent.

What is the recipe for getting rid of groundhogs? ›

To make your own homemade groundhog repellent, mix one half cup of castor oil with two cups of water and spray it in and around the burrow holes. But only apply it when you know they're not there, otherwise, they'll just stay burrowed. (You'll have to keep vigil to see when they head out to find food.)

What does mothballs do to groundhogs? ›

For whatever reason, groundhogs don't care about mothballs. When poured down a burrow, they just dig them out and they get buried in the dirt. In a garden, the animals continue to eat crops right next to mothballs. They just don't care.

Does anything repel groundhogs? ›

Dogs and Cats – let your dog or cat run around in your garden, spreading their smell and hair around, even get them to urine in your garden, as that smell will really deter the groundhogs. Groundhogs also see cats and dogs as predators so even just having them around will scare off the groundhogs.

Do groundhogs hate Irish Spring soap? ›

Now here's a problem that Ohio's farmers like you may be familiar with: groundhogs. You may not be aware that they hate the smell of Irish Spring soap bars. All you have to do is keep the soap in the wrapper, punch holes through the paper, then place the bar of Irish Spring at the entrance to their den.

What attracts groundhogs to your yard? ›

Groundhogs typically take shelter in woodland, farms and fields. In suburban areas, they may be attracted to parks and golf courses due to the shrubbery and grass. That said, they can also find interest in similar traits in your yard. This includes tall grass, excess weeds and wood piles.

Do mothballs keep groundhogs away? ›

No, mothballs and ammonia do not effectively repel groundhogs or any wildlife for that matter. Mothballs, ammonia, and a host of other repellents ultimately fail in their bid to permanently dissuade the nuisance animal.

Should I fill in a groundhog hole? ›

Blocking groundhog holes

If there is concern that a particular burrow is weakening the foundation of a shed or walkway, the opening can be sealed to prevent access at the vulnerable point, however this will not eliminate the burrow system.

How deep is a groundhog hole? ›

Groundhog habitat

They dig burrows that can be 6 feet (1.8 meters) deep, and 20 feet (6 m) wide. These underground homes can also have two to a dozen entrances, according to the National Wildlife Federation. Typically, they have a burrow in the woods for the winter and a burrow in grassy areas for the warmer months.

Is there a poison to get rid of groundhogs? ›

Fumigants (toxic gas) have been used to help get rid of groundhogs. However, it's important that only trained pest control professionals use this method. In some cases, fumigants are only available to licensed pest control operators due to their potential toxicity.

How do I keep groundhogs from returning? ›

Clear vegetation away from entrances. Put a harmless but strong-smelling substance just inside the entrance, such as urine-saturated clumps of kitty litter or a capsaicin-based repellent. Loosely seal the entrance, so the smell stays inside the burrow.

What are the benefits of having a groundhog in your yard? ›

Soil Aeration

When digging, groundhogs help aerate soil. Roots, like all other parts of the plant, have to respire, taking in oxygen and emitting carbon dioxide. In unturned soil, roots deplete their limited oxygen while CO2accumulates, making it hard for them to 'breathe.

What to use to fill groundhog holes? ›

First, a material that is suitable for filling the tunnel such as gravel, sand, concrete, or clay. Avoid organic materials like soil or mulch, since this easily decomposes and attracts groundhogs.

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