Sunday, June 13, 2010

Change the letters around, pets becomes pest

Some say they are pets, but others call them pests.

East Anchorage, Alaska, residents have a rabbit problem.

Read the story by Rosemary Shinohara in the Anchorage Daily News here.
Some of the residents near Cheney Lake are at war with rabbits. Rabbits that shear off broccoli plants in their gardens. Rabbits that devour lilies in the flower beds. Rabbits that destroy perennials bought for $7 apiece.

Retired schoolteacher Collin Smith has posted a lime green sign in her driveway on Sherwood Avenue: "Rabbits have ruined my flower beds, eaten plants and flowers! Now what?" with a double underline on the "what."

Some say maybe 100 or more rabbits are on the loose in East Anchorage devouring gardens and some flowers.

"This was cabbage and broccoli," [Amber] Reichardt said, pointing to a space where plants had been eaten away from raised beds in the backyard. "I replanted all of it. Two hours later they ate it again."

She and her husband have since tried to rabbit-proof their yard with chicken wire under the gate and a barricade where the fence meets the house. As of Friday, the line of defense was holding. "It's been 13 days, a little bit shy of two weeks. We're doing well."

Not everyone hates the rabbits.

Paul Rotkis, who lives on Yorkshire Lane, across the creek from Otter Street and rabbit central, says he's only seen a few different ones around Yorkshire. "They're not a nuisance," he said. "Almost everybody likes them on Yorkshire."

He said he's been feeding two black ones for more than a year.

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