Oh Rats!!!!

Well, in my neck of the woods, rats are few and far between. They have plenty of places to scurry and hide outside. But, I hear for city folks and others these disgusting rodents can be quite a problem. That is why I have developed an informational page just for those of you who are hearing unwanted pitter patter of little feet in your houses.  Rat Problems? Click here.

That is all I have for today. The snow is gradually disappearing and the maple trees are starting to give their sap, so I am hopeful for spring. The PeeMan

The Deer Will be Ready for Spring, Will You?

Well, up here in Maine, the snow is still on the ground and more supposedly coming this weekend. But, one thing I know is true – spring will come! It will come sooner for many of you – lucky dogs. The deer will be ready to make up for lost time and looking for unprotected gardens and flower beds. Well, the PeeMan doesn’t want the fruit of your hard labor nibbled up by pesky deer again this year. Our 100% original, undiluted, quality CoyotePee is the solution. Just set up a Peerimeter around your garden using our handy 33 Day Dispensers or Scenttags and coyote urine, and beat those deer to the punch this year. But, as I frequently say, you don’t have to take my word for it . . .

If you want another testimonial, count me in.  I was honestly skeptical of your claims, especially after reading over and over that NOTHING keeps deer away.  I took a chance 2 years ago (going into my 3rd growing season with it), and I haven’t had one deer in my gardens since.  They decimate my neighbors’ flower beds, and during the winter went after their evergreens.  I’ve watched them wander towards my raised beds and stop dead in their tracks for a minute, then back off and go the other way.  It’s fantastic.  One of my avid gardener friends thought it was gross to hang bottles of pee in the yard (I think it’s gross to plant 400 tulips and never see even one bloom because the deer ate them).  After losing almost everything she planted last year, she came over asking to buy a bottle from me.  That’s why I need more!

Thanks,
Joy Breese

Just another satisfied customer and protected garden. Well, I will go back and stoke the fire and begin the long wait for spring in Maine.  The PeeMan

Squirrel Solutions

The PeeMan here. On another journey into the world of cyberspace I came across the following discussion on VegetableGardener.com

Q. “My gardens are ruined every summer by tunnelling ground squirrels. I am looking for an answer to getting rid of them permanently.  Any ideas?”

One of the answers:

I have had outstanding success with “predator urine.” I find that coyote urine (there are fox, wolf, bobcat and mountain lion available on line). After having terrorist squirrels ravage my garden one year, I tried it. Very small plastic bottles (like motel shampoo ones) with some fiber and holes in them, strunbg every 10-15 feet (and you cannot smell it but skunks, squirrels, deer, woodchucks and rabbits, etc can)…my garden has been completely unmolested for three years! Google “predator urine” and you will get the firms; I use one in Maine. Best, chaepest, environmentally friendly and a fabulous conversation item!”

I couldn’t have said it better myself, and it sounds like they used our 100% PredatorPee.

Raccoons? Don’t take my word for it. . .

Recently, I was asked the following question:

“What is the best way to get rid of raccoons? They destroy my back yard each year starting around the middle of Sept.”

I felt this question was best answered by a satisfied customer who recently wrote the following:

“Hey KJ,

Thanks for the product(100% CoyotePee). It worked very well. I hung it around the affected area and it kept the raccoons out for about 3 weeks.

The only part they managed to get to was the section where I had the dispensers too far from each other. They got in between the two dispensers and dug up a little bit of the new sod.

They’re back now and trying to dig up the grass on the other side of the backyard. Luckily, the sod is well grown in on that side so they haven’t been able to dig it up.

We’re now about to put in more sod in another section of the backyard so I just ordered more of the Coyote pee and dispensers too keep them out of that area too. Lots of fun!”

There you have it. CoyotePee is the ticket for pesky raccoons.

As always, thanks for asking. The Peeman

Peeman Takes on Backyard Varmints

Q. I am in central NJ and have backyard varmint problems you can solve. Bears are native nearby – wolves and mountain lions are not. The varmints are groundhogs, wild housecats, and field mice. Is wolf urine what I am looking for?

A. I think CoyotePee would be best for your situation. Just click on coyote urine on our website to get to the CoyotePee page.

Thanks for asking – KJ, The PeeMan

PredatorPee Goes to Washington!

Earlier this month the following article by Jule Banville appeared in the Washington D.C. City News. It appears that even urbanites sometimes need predatorpee.

Want to Know How to Get Rid of Rats? Ask the Peeman.

Rats hanging out in cars and eating essential parts is a common enough problem in the District of Columbia. As City Desk previously chronicled, it happens in Adams Morgan. It happens at 15th and U. Kathryn Kailian, an esthetician who lives in Dupont Circle, had to take her car in six times for service because of rat damage. At one point, she submitted a claim for the $1,200 her dealership charged to completely re-wire her vehicle. “Our insurance company dropped us,” she says.

Fed up, Kailian Googled for solutions and found coyote pee. She ordered a bottle of it on the Internet, sprayed it on her engine, and hasn’t had a problem since. One bottle will last her “for years” since she only spritzes every few months. The smell dissipates pretty quickly and the rats have left her alone, despite the fact that she parks in an alley with Dumpsters filled by Five Guys, Chipotle, Cosi, and other delicious-to-rats restaurants.

But how does a seller of coyote piss collect coyote piss?

For the answer, I turn to the self-described “peeman,” Ken Johnson, who has been in the urine business for more than 20 years. Johnson, 57, has a wife, three daughters, and a nice house in Maine, all supported by the sale of animal waste.

He asserts the products at predatorpee.com—whether from wolf, bobcat, fox, or mountain lion—are the real stuff, not synthetic, and not dressed-up dog pee (although dog pee is for sale, too, to help Rags figure out where he should go). How it works is only slightly mysterious.

Johnson has contracts with zoos and wildlife preserves “all over the country” whose employees collect animals’ pee, mostly in drains inside the exhibits. The mysterious part is where these places are. Johnson doesn’t like to get specific. “We’ve run into problems with PETA people,” he says.

His site cautions that all of the suppliers are regulated by state and local agencies and that the animals are treated humanely. He says in a phone interview that no one is pumping them with water or Budweiser to make them go.

Basically, it’s a moneymaker for nonprofits, a moneymaker for Johnson, and a solution for people, like Kailian, who’ve had it. In Florida, coyote pee wards off iguanas. In Japan, wolf pee keeps wild boar out of rice paddies. And for anywhere there are “unwanted people or animals,” Johnson’s newest product is Skunk ‘Em, a proven agent to stop loiterers, he says. What works for what pest depends on the food chain. For example, somewhere inside an urban rat’s brain is a primal fear of a coyote, even though that coyote probably never roamed anywhere near where the rat has ever lived.

As for making his living from piss, the Peeman’s got a healthy sense of humor about it (his daughters, however—ranging in age from 15 to 32—are pretty much mortified). After fielding the question about how he gets the pee more times than he can recall, he created a spot on his site that details “How I Became a Urine Collector” by “P. Catcher.” It runs alongside a testimonial written from the coyote’s perspective.

Trained as a marketer, Johnson acquired the company in 1986 from a former client. Back then, the products were bought primarily by hunters to attract deer. But Johnson started noticing that people in nonrural areas were buying his products—suburban gardeners were an early indication of wider applications.

Then there was the spike Predatorpee got when Dave Barry included bobcat pee in his annual gift guide, which runs in the Washington Post Magazine. “People wanted to buy it for their lawyers, for their ex-wives,” says Johnson.

And then, Al Gore invented the Internet and Predatorpee began flowing like never before.

These days, the urine is sold exclusively online and comes in several forms. A spray bottle of coyote piss runs $25.99, plus S&H.

Johnson has an office/warehouse on his 40 acres outside of Bangor, a good distance form the house. He’s become desensitized, to some degree, to the smell. “Probably more so than my wife,” he says. “She knows when I’ve been working with Skunk ‘Em.”

Words from the Peeman

This is the PeeMan, for the past 20 years or so I have been in the pee-business.  Pee Business? Yes, that’s right. First started to supply hunters and trappers with the wild animal urine that they use to lure animals, it has evolved into something pee-mendous!  Shortly after starting the business, we found that people were buying our pee who had absolutely no interest in hunting or trapping.  They were buying our coyote urine and other varieties for everything from housebreaking their dog to keeping deer and other wild animals from feasting on their prize ornamentals.  We found that the pee-market had a life of its own.  When humor columnist Dave Barry included our bobcat pee in his top ten Christmas gift list, yet another market category emerged…the prank gift market is huge!  People send PredatorPee to people they love and people they hate.  They squirt the pungent liquid in places no wild animal has ever been!  You can only imagine what uses a frat house could find for wolfpee.  Now, of course, hunters and trappers make up only a tiny portion of our customer base.  Regular folks with gardens, flowers, shrubs and backyards make up the most.   Now on this day, July 14, 2008, PredatorPee enters the blog-o-sphere.  Who would have thought?

 

In each new post, I will include some of the pee questions we get every day at predatorpee.com and our answers…like this one:

 

Dear PeeMan,

 

Coyote or Fox???

I live in Arizona where the problem is rabbits. We also have coyotes (not

enough it seems) that do prey on the rabbits, but no foxes, that I know

of.   It seems logical that coyote urine would be the product of choice for me,

but your website suggests fox urine to repel rabbits. Which product would

you recommend in view of this situation?

 

Thank you in advance,

Charles

 

Dear Charlie,

Both the fox and coyote love to dine on rabbit and the rabbits know it!

We try to simplify the choices on our website. In your case, the coyote pee

would be my choice.

When dealing with rabbits keep the pee on or close to the ground around

the perimeter of the area that you want to protect. Apply liberally the

first couple of times, then gradually reduce the amount that you use.

 

Thanks for writing,

The PeeMan

 

Next Post – “How PredatorPee works” …coming soon.