To stop bandicoots digging up gardens, use buried mesh fences, cut lawn grubs, and protect beds with covers and night triggers.
Small, cone-shaped pits across turf and beds usually point to night visits from a short-snouted marsupial. The aim here is simple: keep plants safe, keep wildlife safe, and keep your yard tidy without harm. The steps below lean on humane barriers, food-source control, and gentle deterrents that suit suburban blocks and rural edges alike.
Why Bandicoots Dig And What Those Pits Tell You
These native insect hunters follow scent and sound under turf. A typical pit is narrow, 5–15 cm deep, with spoil on one side. Fresh pits by dawn signal active foraging, not nesting or den building. If you also see torn turf or shallow scrapes across many square metres in a single night, lawn larvae are likely abundant and drawing repeat visits.
Quick ID Cues
Look for small conical holes, a neat plug of earth beside each hole, and signs of worms or beetle grubs. Claw marks are fine and close. Scat is small and crumbly. Cats and foxes leave longer trenches and scuffs; brush turkeys rake larger patches and mound leaf litter. Trail cameras confirm visitors and time of activity.
Fast Wins Within A Weekend
Start with the spots that take the most damage. Cover new seedlings and raised beds first, then shield high-value turf near paths. Many fixes are simple and low-tech, and they work best in layers.
| Action | Where It Helps | Effort |
|---|---|---|
| Pin bird-netting flat on turf overnight | Fresh dig zones on lawns | Low |
| Lay wire cloches over veg rows | Seedlings, root crops | Low |
| Motion sprinkler after dusk | Open lawns, orchard belts | Medium |
| Clip-in mesh lids on beds | Raised planters | Medium |
| Solar lights near digging lanes | Edges and paths | Low |
| Park a trail cam | Confirm timing and entry | Low |
Stopping Bandicoots Digging In Lawns: Practical Steps
Pits in turf usually track to a food spike under the grass. Cut the buffet and visits taper fast. Two lines of action work well: manage the larvae in the root zone and shield the surface until numbers drop.
Cut The Food Source
Lawn beetle grubs and other larvae cluster near thatch and damp patches. Dethatch, spike for drainage, and water in the cool part of day only when soil is dry. Use a hose-end soapy flush test at dusk to see what rises in sample squares. If counts are high, apply a product suited to the pest and season or use a biological control with nematodes sold for turf. Follow label safety for pets and native visitors.
Shield The Surface At Night
Pin bird-netting or light mesh flat to the grass with pegs so snouts can’t reach the thatch. Lift it during the day. A motion sprinkler near the main runway breaks the pattern fast. Rotate its angle each night so paths stay unpredictable. Where pets roam, pick gentle settings.
Bed And Border Protection That Works
Soft soil tempts digging near edibles, bulbs, and drip lines. Give plants a cover and set edges that don’t snag paws or trap wildlife. Think light, airy, and quick to lift for harvest.
Row Covers And Cloches
For salad rows, lay U-shaped hoops and clip insect mesh across them. For single plants, drop wire cloches or upturned baskets and pin them down. Keep gaps tight to the soil. Mesh still lets air, rain, and bees through during the day when flowers open.
Mulch And Surface Texture
Woodchip, coarse gravel rings, or crushed brick make snout work less rewarding near beds. Top up thin mulch where cats or foxes leave tracks, since those visitors can pressure small marsupials to forage in tighter spots.
Build A Wildlife-Safe Barrier
Fencing stops repeat entry once food drops. The pattern is simple: small mesh and an underground foot to block digs under the line. Use 12–20 mm mesh, at least 50 cm above ground, and bury the lower edge in a trench. See the Queensland guidance on fencing for depth and layout tips that suit backyards.
Trench And Turn-Out Method
Cut a slot 15–20 cm deep along the fence line. Drop the mesh so it touches the base of the trench, then bend a 20–30 cm “apron” outward and backfill. This blocks tunnel starts right at the edge. Reinforce gates with brush strips and a metal threshold so there’s no nose-wide gap.
Where To Use Barriers
Shield veg patches, hen yards, and fruit-tree skirts. On steep banks, anchor mesh panels with star pickets and tie wire at three heights. In sand, go a touch deeper and tamp the backfill firmly so the apron holds.
Keep Pets And Wildlife Safe
Native marsupials sit under state wildlife laws. No trapping or harm. If you want a quick primer, the NSW fact page outlines protections and contact points; link through mid-scroll keeps it handy: NSW bandicoot protections. Skip poisons aimed at ground pests in open beds, since baits can hit pets and insect-eaters. If you keep a dog, add a bell or light at night and use a lead for late yard checks. Cats should stay indoors after dusk; curfew saves small wildlife and avoids vet bills.
Night-Time Deterrents That Don’t Hurt
Short bursts of light, sound, or water can break a foraging loop. Use them as a bridge while barriers and lawn fixes do the heavy lifting.
Options To Try
- Motion sprinkler on a hose timer near the main runway.
- Low-glare solar stakes along entry gaps.
- Portable mesh panels to block narrow lanes between sheds and beds.
- Trial a scent on turf edges only if it’s pet-safe and plant-safe; reapply after rain.
Planting And Yard Design That Reduces Digging
Layered plantings guide where small animals travel. Dense clumps of native grasses and strappy leaves form resting cover and steer paths away from seed beds. Logs and rocks cluster insects in set spots, which you can place away from lawns and veg.
Lawns And Edges
Sharpen the mowing line so turf isn’t ragged at the border. Replace bare, damp corners with gravel, thyme, or lomandra strips. Leaf litter islands near the back fence keep the foraging zone away from the patio and play areas.
Fruit Trees And Produce Drops
Fallen fruit is a beacon. Rake twice a week during peak ripening. Use mesh sleeves or bags on low fruit clusters if night visits keep spiking under the canopy. Where chickens live under trees, close their access at dusk so feed doesn’t draw extra visitors.
Entry Points You’ll Want To Fix
Most visits start at side gates, gaps under back fences, or eroded spots under sleepers. Scan for snout-wide spaces at dusk with a torch. Fill gaps with treated pine infills, aluminium kick plates, or a run of mesh pegged to the ground. At gates, close the gap under the swing arc with a plate fixed to the bottom rail.
What’s Legal, What’s Not
These insect-eaters are native. Do not trap, relocate, or harm them. If you find an injured animal, call a local rescue line. Use only garden products that are safe for pets and native animals. Baits, snares, and sticky boards have no place in yards with wildlife. If a neighbour lays baits that worry you, raise it gently and share links to pet-safe options.
When You’re Renting Or On A Tight Budget
Portable fixes still go a long way. Roll a few mesh panels and peg them at dusk, then store them behind a shed during the day. Netting pinned to turf, hoops over rows, and a single motion sprinkler near the worst patch can steady a yard for months while you plan a fence. A bag of pegs, a roll of bird-netting, and a compact hose timer cover most needs.
Maintenance Rhythm That Keeps Holes Away
Set a simple loop each week: scan for new pits, top up mulch where it thins, clear produce drops under fruit trees, and check that gate gaps stay closed. Every few weeks, repeat a soapy flush test on the lawn. When larvae drop, visits usually ease. If digging returns after heavy rain, repeat the lawn scan and move the sprinkler to a fresh angle.
Common Scenarios And Reliable Fixes
Seedlings Vanish Overnight
Pin clip-in mesh lids over trays and rows. Add a strip of fine mesh along the bed edge where soil meets the path. Water early evening so surface scent is faint by night.
Holes Cluster Near A Deck Or Shed
That zone likely hides grubs under warmer, drier soil. Run a soapy flush test in a one-metre square. If larvae are dense, treat that square and a buffer around it. Block the lane between structures with a portable panel for a week.
New Fence, New Gaps
Fresh landscaping settles. After the first storm, walk the base with a torch. Pack any sink lines with gravel and topsoil, then peg a short skirt of mesh until soil compacts.
Proof-Of-Work Checklist
Use this as a quick audit before bed. It keeps the steps tight and repeatable.
| Task | Goal | When |
|---|---|---|
| Pin netting on turf zones | Block night foraging | Evening |
| Cover veg rows with mesh | Protect seedlings | Evening |
| Run a soapy lawn test | Check grub levels | Monthly |
| Angle motion sprinkler | Break entry pattern | Night |
| Inspect fence line | Find new gaps | Weekly |
| Rake fruit drops | Remove lures | Twice weekly |
When To Call For Help
If you spot snare wire, bait, or an injured animal, ring a licensed wildlife group. For turf pest ID, a local turf adviser or nursery can match products to season and species. If a strata fence has gaps, a short written note with photos often clears the way for a shared fix.
Why Tidy Digging Can Be A Net Positive
Shallow pits aerate soil and cycle organic matter. The same snout that raids a patch of lawn also eats pests. Once barriers guide traffic and lawn larvae drop, many gardeners find the yard settles into a livable balance with only light patch work after rain.
