Florida corgi VS Toronto Raccoon
I have a stubborn raccoon that camps out on my 2nd floor balcony, it keeps coming back every other night and causing the corgis to bark in the middle of the night. I had a talk with the condo management and they said animal control will not come out, the only thing they suggested was pouring "bleach" around the balcony. The balcony have no trash, food or plants, so most of the internet suggestions do not apply to my situation.
Vienna: "Open the gate dad, it's an oversize squirrel!"
The racoon is quite bold, it will not back off, when I use a broom to "sweep" him off, it growls and hold his ground. The corgis can bark all night long and he will not move an inch away from the sliding door. The only thing that "worked" so far is a water squirting bottle, it'll move but only to crawl to my next door neighbour's balcony.
Notice how FAT this raccoon is?
When the "coast" is cleared, he'll climb back :(
Raccoon: "curse you! I shall return!"
Any ideas?
OCT 2 *UPDATE*
"Randy" the raccoon crossed the rainbow bridge tonight, he was hit by a car earlier this evening, I picked up his body and lay him on the sidewalk :(
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I should of looked it up before i posted. Sorry, i should know better, i usally look this stuff up before posting. Yes moth balls are toxic. Do not want other animals getting into that.
PS Now Jack says that there are more coyotes roaming our neighborhood streets in the daytime. I guess I better be more careful in what I wish for––coonhounds on loan!
I'm not sure how to implement this but... could you get the dogs to pee on the balcony, just a little? When it comes down to it, dogs are predators and 'coons are prey, and they should have the prey reaction ("Run away!") to dog urine scent.
Alternatively, you can buy predator urine online for exactly this purpose. (I am not making this up- there's a lab nearby that studies the prey reaction to predator urine scent and at every poster session, they always get asked, "So... how *do* you get urine from lions and tigers and bears (oh my!)?")
I'm not sure if anyone has commented on the ammonia trick but I'd highly advise NOT to do this...I had a neighbor that used this trick on some possums that moved into their yard and while it did drive them away, they got back more than they bargained for...FLEAS! Their dog had come in a day after the ammonia treating with what they thought were clumps of dirt on it's muzzle and back. When they tried to "dust" their dog off, they noticed the dirt moving all by itself...and of course the fleas made it into their house as well. UGH! Poor pup!
After much research and several calls, they learned ammonia seems to be a natural attractant for fleas. So, while it did get the possums a packin', our neighbor now had to seed their yard with flea treatment and treat the entire house for the infestation! Very $$$.
Just thought I'd give you a heads up if no one else had mentioned this potential hazard of ammonia.
Good luck and I wish you speedy racoon banishment!
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