Fox deterrent advice in Exeter
Professional fox deterrent advice services in Exeter and surrounding areas. Local, reliable handyman - no job too small.
Price Guide
£60
Typical Duration
1 hr
Location
Exeter, Devon
Practical advice about dealing with foxes in your Exeter garden. I assess the problem, explain what's realistic, and recommend deterrents worth trying - honest guidance, not magic fixes.
The Urban Fox Reality
Exeter has foxes. Loads of them. They're clever, bold, and not going anywhere.
Urban foxes thrive in city environments. Your garden is part of their territory, whether you like it or not. They dig, poo, make noise, disturb bins, and generally make their presence felt.
You can't eliminate them (legally or practically), but you can make your garden less attractive than alternatives. That's what fox deterrents are about - persuading them to be someone else's problem.
💡 Pro tip: The best fox deterrent is removing what attracts them. Food sources (bins, compost, fallen fruit), sheltered den sites, and easy access. Fix those and you're halfway there before buying any products.
Managing Expectations
| ✅ Realistic Goals | ❌ Unrealistic Hopes |
|---|---|
| Make garden less attractive to foxes | Eliminate foxes from your area |
| Reduce frequency of visits | Stop all fox activity forever |
| Protect specific areas (veg beds, ponds) | Create 100% fox-proof space |
| Discourage toileting on lawn | Make foxes avoid your street |
What This Visit Covers
🔍 Garden Assessment
I look at:
- Access points - where are they getting in?
- Attractants - what's bringing them here?
- Problem areas - what damage are they causing?
- Den sites - are they living under your shed?
- Boundary condition - how fox-resistant is your fencing?
💡 What Actually Works
| Deterrent Method | Effectiveness | Reality Check |
|---|---|---|
| Motion-activated sprinklers | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Work well, annoying to neighbours sometimes |
| Scent deterrents | ⭐⭐⭐ | Need regular reapplication |
| Physical barriers | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Expensive but effective |
| Ultrasonic devices | ⭐⭐ | Hit and miss, mixed reviews |
| Removing attractants | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Most important step |
| Lights/noise deterrents | ⭐ | Foxes adapt quickly |
🛠️ Practical Solutions
Based on your situation, I recommend:
- Fence improvements - what height, what mesh, where to install
- Barrier methods - protecting specific areas like ponds or beds
- Product recommendations - what to buy and where locally
- Den eviction - how to discourage foxes living under sheds (humanely)
- Bin security - stopping food access
- Lawn treatment - dealing with fox poo
🛒 Where to Buy
- Local Exeter/Devon stockists for deterrent products
- Approximate costs for different approaches
- What's worth the money vs what's marketing nonsense
Common Fox Problems & Solutions
Digging holes in lawn? Usually searching for grubs/worms or burying food. Improve lawn health (fewer grubs), use scent deterrents. Not entirely solvable.
Using lawn as toilet? Territorial marking. Clean up poo immediately (removes scent), use lawn treatment to discourage, consider scent deterrents. Persistent problem, needs ongoing management.
Living under shed/decking? Evict during daytime when they're out, block access, use deterrents to discourage return. Spring (when cubs are young) is tricky - may need professional wildlife advice.
Disturbing bins? Secure lids, use bungees, remove food waste nightly, wash bins to remove smell. Solvable with effort.
Frightening pets/chickens? Secure chicken coops properly (buried mesh, reinforced doors). Small pets shouldn't be left out unsupervised at dawn/dusk. Foxes see them as prey.
Just being loud at night? Mating/territorial behavior. There's no solution for this - it's foxes being foxes. Earplugs.
Pricing
| Service | Time | You'll Pay |
|---|---|---|
| Garden assessment & deterrent advice | 1 hr | £60 |
Includes written recommendations and local stockist information. Physical deterrent installation quoted separately if wanted.
Perfect For Your Garden If...
✅ Foxes are causing actual damage - digging, toileting, disturbing bins
✅ You want honest advice - not sales pitches for expensive systems
✅ You're trying random deterrents - get expert assessment first
✅ You need to protect chickens/ponds/specific areas - targeted solutions
Why Choose Us for Fox deterrent advice in Exeter?
Garden assessment for fox access points
Honest advice on what actually works
Product recommendations for local purchase
Realistic expectations - not miracle solutions
What to Expect
Step 1: Discuss the Problem
What are foxes actually doing? How often? What have you already tried? What's your budget for deterrents?
Step 2: Garden Walkthrough
I assess access points, attractants, den sites, areas needing protection. Work out why foxes are visiting and what's realistic to deter them.
Step 3: Recommendations
Specific advice on deterrents worth trying, how to implement them, where to buy products. Written summary you can refer back to.
🔧 DIY Tips
Want to tackle fox deterrents yourself?
🔧 Immediate Actions (Free)
Remove attractants:
- Secure bins properly (lids, bungees)
- Remove fallen fruit promptly
- Don't leave pet food outside
- Cover compost properly
- Clear areas under sheds/decking
Block access:
- Repair fence gaps near ground level
- Use paving slabs weighted down at fence base
- Block gaps under gates
- Fill gaps under sheds (when foxes aren't denning)
Clean up evidence:
- Pick up fox poo daily (breaks scent marking)
- Hose down areas they're toileting
- Wash bins to remove smell
🛡️ Physical Deterrents
Fence improvements:
- Add wire mesh to bottom 60cm of fence
- Bury mesh 30cm underground bent outward
- Smooth fence tops (remove climbing aids)
Specific area protection:
- Chicken wire over veg beds
- Pond netting at night
- Buried mesh around chicken coops
Den eviction:
- Confirm foxes are actually there (not just assumptions)
- Check for cubs (spring/early summer) - if present, wait
- Wait till daytime when foxes are out
- Block entrance with rubble/mesh
- Monitor for digging attempts
- Use deterrents around area
💊 Deterrent Products
Scent deterrents:
- Male urine (sounds mad, can work)
- Commercial fox repellent granules/sprays
- Jeyes Fluid diluted around boundaries (careful with plants)
- Reapply after rain
Motion deterrents:
- Sprinklers (effective but can annoy neighbors)
- Ultrasonic devices (variable results)
⚠️ What doesn't work
- Noise deterrents (foxes adapt)
- Constant lights (same - they adapt)
- Poison (illegal, dangerous, cruel)
- Shooting (illegal in urban areas, cruel, ineffective)
- Hoping they'll just leave (they won't)
💡 Pro trick: Foxes are creatures of habit. If you can break their routine for 2-3 weeks (deterrents, access blocking, removing attractants), they often establish new territories elsewhere. But you need to be consistent - sporadic efforts don't work.
Rather leave it to a pro? No problem - that's what I'm here for. Give me a call.
Good to Know
🦊 Foxes are protected: You can deter them but you can't harm them. It's illegal to poison, trap cruelly, or shoot them in urban areas. Deterrents must be humane. Anyone suggesting otherwise is wrong.
Breeding season (spring) is problematic. If foxes have established a den with cubs, eviction becomes complicated. May need to wait until cubs are independent (late summer).
Neighbours matter. If they're feeding foxes or have attractive bins/compost, your deterrents will be less effective. Foxes work territories, not individual gardens.
Old Exeter gardens often have interconnected boundaries - walls with gaps, shared hedges, lanes behind properties. Harder to exclude foxes than modern estates with solid fencing.
Legal responsibility: If fox damage extends to neighbors (digging under their fence, for example), it's not your legal responsibility unless you're actively encouraging foxes. But being neighborly helps.
Professional pest control can be called for severe cases but they use the same deterrent methods, just at higher cost. Worth trying DIY first.
This isn't a cat/dog deterrent visit - that's a separate service. Foxes need different approaches than domestic animals.
Got chickens? Ponds with expensive fish? Specific high-value areas to protect? Mention it - solutions are targeted, not generic.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you guarantee foxes won't come back?
No. Anyone who promises that is lying. Foxes are clever, adaptable, and in Exeter there are loads of them. But I can suggest deterrents that make your garden less attractive than your neighbours'. It's about managing the problem, not eliminating foxes from Devon entirely.
What damage are foxes actually doing?
I'll assess that - might be digging holes, using lawn as toilet, disturbing bins, frightening pets, or just being loud at night. The solution depends on what they're actually doing. Some problems are solvable, some you just have to live with.
Do those ultrasonic devices work?
Mixed results. Some people swear by them, others say foxes ignore them completely. They're worth trying if you can return them if useless. I'll tell you which brands get better reviews and where to buy them.
Can you fox-proof my garden completely?
Not realistically. You'd need 6-foot fencing with buried barriers and covered roof - basically a prison compound. For most gardens, it's about deterrents and making your space less appealing, not creating Fort Knox.
Will you install deterrents or just advise?
This visit is advice only. If you want physical deterrents installed (fencing improvements, buried barriers, etc), that's a separate job but I can absolutely do it. Get the advice first, then decide what's worth implementing.
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