Stop rabbits burrowing in your garden by burying wire mesh at edges, removing cover, and using safe deterrents to steer them away.
Why Rabbits Burrow And What It Means
Burrows give rabbits a cool hideout, a nursery, and quick exits from danger. Fresh digs near beds tell you food is close. Tunnels that hug fences point to weak spots. A shallow scrape in a lawn often marks a test hole before a larger warren. Read these signs early and you keep damage low.
Typical openings are a handspan wide with crumbly soil pushed out at the lip. Chewed stems cut on a neat angle add another clue. Round droppings, narrow runways through grass, and tufts of fur seal the case. Take a slow walk at dawn or dusk and map entries, exits, and paths. That map guides your fixes.
Stop Rabbits Burrowing In Your Garden: Quick Wins
Close easy routes first. Patch gaps under gates. Tie wire to sagging panels. Cover active holes with a flat stone only after you see no kits inside. Then pin a square of hardware cloth over the spot so digging shifts elsewhere. Pick ripe produce, clear fallen fruit, and trim cover along edges so the yard feels risky for skittish visitors.
- Lift low fence lines with extra mesh tied and staked tight.
- Stack bricks across narrow runs while you build a better fix.
- Move brush piles, stacked timber, and tarps that create perfect hideouts.
- Set a motion sprinkler to watch key paths at night to break habits fast.
Rabbit-Proof Barrier Options (Quick Build Guide)
| Where | Material & Size | Install Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Perimeter fence | Galvanized woven wire, 1 inch mesh; 90–120 cm above ground | Bury 15–25 cm and bend the bottom out to form an L-shape apron |
| Garden gate | Same mesh on a rigid frame | Seal the gap at the sill with a threshold strip or buried apron |
| Raised beds | ½ inch hardware cloth under the bed | Staple tight to the frame before filling with soil |
| Under decks / sheds | ½–1 inch hardware cloth skirting | Dig a narrow trench and add a 30 cm outward apron |
| Tree trunks | Plastic guard or hardware cloth sleeve | Leave space around bark and remove before stems expand |
| High-value crops | Mesh cylinders 60–90 cm tall | Pin the base every 30 cm with landscape staples |
Build A Burrow-Proof Perimeter
Choose The Right Mesh
Mesh Openings
Use galvanized woven wire with 1 inch openings for fences. Smaller ½ inch hardware cloth shines for aprons and bed liners. Fine netting tears fast, so treat it as short term only. A rigid frame and snug ties matter as much as the mesh.
Metal Gauge And Coating
Go for strong, galvanized wire. Light garden net can stretch, leaving gaps that paws can lift. Heavy wire keeps shape at corners and around gates, where strain builds.
Dig An L-Shaped Apron
Trench Depth
Rabbits test fence lines. A buried apron stops the test. Dig a shallow trench, drop the mesh 15–25 cm, then bend the base outward for 20–30 cm to make an L. Backfill and tamp. This shape turns digging into a dead end and saves you from chasing fresh holes each week.
Apron Width
University guidance notes that burying the base 6–10 inches and turning the bottom outward blocks tunneling with less digging than a deep trench. See the method from the University of California’s Integrated Pest Management program: bury and turn the fence base.
Fix Gates And Corners
Wildlife finds slack corners first. Add stiffeners on posts. Tie mesh to every strand of the frame. For a clean sill, set a timber or board and face it with mesh that meets the apron. Check after wind or heavy rain and retie any loose spots.
Seal Hotspots: Sheds, Decks, And Beds
Under Decks And Sheds
Skirting Height
Those gaps offer shade and calm. Close them with hardware cloth fixed to a timber base. Aim for a waist-high skirt on the wall, plus a 30 cm outward apron so digging stops at the edge. Leave a small, latched access panel for maintenance.
Raised Beds And Tunnels
Line the base with ½ inch hardware cloth before adding soil. Rabbits rarely chew up through metal. If a burrow appears near a bed, press a tight patch over the point and stake it in a square to avoid leverage.
Plants, Mulch, And Watering Tricks
Plant Choices As A Soft Shield
Border Ideas
Bold scents and firm textures make a decent border. Think woody herbs, leathery leaves, and grey, downy foliage. Place tender greens and seedlings toward the center, inside cages or hoops, while roots set.
Mulches That Resist Digging
Coarse gravel, sharp grit, and chunky bark slow scratching near burrow mouths. Lay them in a 30–45 cm band along the fence base and around key beds. Keep soft straw for paths, not edges.
Water Moves Soil Back
A fast jet from a hose can collapse a shallow test hole while you install a fix. Check first that no animal is resting inside. Once the area is safe, add your mesh patch and pack the soil.
Repellents And Scare Tactics That Help
Use these as helpers, not as your only plan. Scents fade and animals learn. Pair them with a good barrier.
Sprays
Reapplication Routine
Egg-based or capsaicin sprays can push browsing away from bed edges. Reapply after rain and fresh growth. Keep sprays off crops near harvest.
Motion Sprinklers
A well placed motion sprinkler startles night visitors and breaks regular routes. Aim it across known paths and near fresh scrapes. Keep the lens clean and test weekly.
Sound And Light Gadgets
These give short wins at best. Use them while you build your fence, then lean on the barrier. Rotate positions so routine never forms.
Deterrents And When To Use Them
| Method | Best Use | Care Tips |
|---|---|---|
| Egg or capsaicin spray | Protecting bed edges and fresh growth | Reapply after rain and pruning; avoid edible parts near harvest |
| Motion sprinkler | Night paths and fence lines | Test weekly; set the arc and sensor height for the route |
| Scent granules | Short runs by sheds or decks | Replace often; pair with a mesh patch |
| Mesh plant cages | Seedlings and prized crops | Pin bases tight with staples |
| Row covers | Cool-season greens | Seal edges with soil or pins |
| Ultrasonic boxes | Temporary gap filler | Move weekly; do not rely on them alone |
Law, Welfare, And Common Sense
Exclusion beats traps. Many places limit relocation. Live traps can stress animals and leave young behind. If trapping is legal where you live and you choose that path, use roomy cages, check at first light, and release as rules state. Never use poisons in a yard used by kids, pets, or pollinators. When a burrow sits on a shared boundary, speak with neighbors so fixes meet on both sides.
For clear, step-by-step fence specs and rabbit-safe tactics, read the guidance from the Royal Horticultural Society on fence height and buried aprons. It lays out mesh size and burial depth that gardeners can build with hand tools: RHS rabbit-proofing advice.
Seasonal Plan So Burrows Don’t Return
Spring
Walk the line after frost. Retie loose mesh. Add bed liners before sowing. Cover greens with hoops and net until leaves toughen. Mow field edges so runs stand out.
Summer
Harvest on time. Clear trimmings. Water beds early in the day so dusk activity finds fewer wet scents. Reset motion sprinklers after storms and keep their batteries fresh. Keep grass short along fence lines so new scrapes cannot hide.
Autumn
Rabbits search for warm cover. Remove piles and stacked pots. Fit skirting to sheds and decks before the first cold snap. Add a fresh apron on any corner that showed digging in warm months. Swap soft mulches at edges for grit or gravel.
Winter
Protect bark on young trees with guards. Clear snow berms that create easy steps over a low fence. Patch any hole as soon as ground softens after a thaw. Walk the barrier after wind and retie mesh that lifted.
Troubleshooting: If Burrowing Continues
Holes Keep Reappearing
Check for a gap where the apron meets a post. Rabbits follow edges. Add a square patch that overlaps by at least 15 cm on all sides. Stake the outer edge so paws meet wire, not soft soil.
Fence Looks Fine, Beds Still Suffer
Search for a hidden entry under a gate sill or a drain cutout. Add a sill strip faced with mesh and tie off any pipe runs. A small trench and a short apron at the gate can stop nightly visits.
Small Yard Near Open Land
Fence a smaller core zone for edible crops and protect the rest with plant cages and a sprinkler. That smaller target keeps costs down while still blocking burrowing near the food you value most.
Build Checklist You Can Follow This Weekend
Tools
Wire cutters, fencing pliers, heavy staples, cable ties, mallet, digging spade, stake driver, level, gloves, and eye protection.
Steps
- Mark the line and gate swing with stakes and string.
- Cut mesh panels with a 20–30 cm lip for the apron.
- Dig a shallow trench along the line and at the gate sill.
- Set posts, keep them plumb, and tie mesh tight from top to base.
- Bend the lip outward, lay it flat, and backfill firmly.
- Face the gate sill with mesh and add a threshold strip.
- Walk the fence, fix snags, and set a sprinkler on the busiest run.
