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Gardening

Who ate my apples?

(17 Posts)
FlicketyB Mon 03-Feb-14 17:40:06

Last October I put several boxes of apples in our garden shed. Now said shed has had mice in it before, which is why my apples are in plastic boxes and not in my apple rack.

On several occasions since storing them I have checked them, brought some in for eating and generally kept an eye on them and they have been fine. The last time was just after Christmas.

However I went up to the shed today to bring the last box in for stewing - and it was empty - just lots of newspaper apple wrappings but no apples.
The apple wrappings were not nibbled or shredded, most were still in the box but a few were on the floor.

Does anybody have any idea who the culprit could be? It is not mice, they nibble on site. We do have cats in the garden, and after the recent winds brought the fence down, chickens. But I do not think cats eat apples and chickens (there are only three) would peck at them not remove them. Heaven forfend is it RATS!!!!!!

Ana Mon 03-Feb-14 17:45:56

I don't know - but these two seem to like apples!

home.bt.com/news/oddnews/rats-could-grow-bigger-than-sheep-11363872766038

tanith Mon 03-Feb-14 18:24:13

Squirrels like Apples or do you have a sneaky neighbour who likes Apple Pie grin

Elegran Mon 03-Feb-14 18:26:40

Is there a lock on the shed? The culprit may be a two-legged one.

absent Mon 03-Feb-14 18:27:54

Puzzling – but not so puzzling as who buried a hard-boiled egg down the bottom of a huge plant pot containing a Japanese maple.

FlicketyB Mon 03-Feb-14 19:02:07

I will approach the shed very gingerly tomorrow, just in case there is a sheep sized rat there.

I thought about two legged invaders, but the apples were really only fit for stewing, a bit soft and wrinkly, any way both our neighbours gardens are awash with apple trees, so if they wanted apples they would have saved their own.

Now squirrels......., we have a lot of them because we have a hazel tree in the garden. Would they pick the apples out and take them away or would they, like mice, nibble on the spot? I haven't seen any bits of apple anywhere, although I haven't really looked.

rosesarered Mon 10-Feb-14 20:06:00

I can help you on this [no! it wasn't me!] but I happen to know that squirrels take things away, they carry quite large items in their mouths and stash them in their 'drays' usually up a large tree.They never eat them on the spot. Can't say what rats do. However, how are squirrels getting in and out of the shed?Sure it isn't grandchildren?

merlotgran Mon 10-Feb-14 20:17:25

We have just one quite tame squirrel. He loves fat balls and nibbles a hole in the net so he can run off with it. Last year's apples were all gone by the time he adopted us so I don't know if he likes them yet.

dogsdinner Mon 10-Feb-14 20:57:16

Have you looked on the floor to see if any rat droppings about, might be a clue. Do foxes take apples away? Let us know if you find the culprit.

margaretm74 Mon 10-Feb-14 21:21:45

Not sure that rats would take them away. We have had to stop composting our vegetable peelings again because the rats like them (and bird seed, which had fallen from the bird feeder)
I have seen squirrels take food away to bury all over the garden, we are constantly pulling up hazel saplings sprouted from Cyril the squirrel's buried cache, plus finding buried windfalls.

gillybob Mon 10-Feb-14 21:23:22

That is weird Absent I transplanted some shrubs for my parents last year and found an intact raw egg at the bottom of one of the pots. It must have been there for at least 3 years. confused

I am with the two legged apple thief FlicketyB as I am sure any four legged friend would have left some evidence.

Flowerofthewest Mon 10-Feb-14 22:37:38

Do you live anywhere where pinemarten inhabit. They are partial to fruit and also eggs.

Lona Mon 10-Feb-14 22:41:30

My son tells me that rats can steal eggs from the hens, by holding the egg in their mouth, lying on their back, and then another rat will drag them back to the nest by their tail!
Maybe they like to store them for a rainy day.

FlicketyB Tue 11-Feb-14 09:25:29

I have looked for rat droppings but can find none. My instinct would be to say two-legged thieves, but the apples were wizened and a bit soft, not an attractive eat, good for cooking but not eating raw - plus who on earth knew about them and could reach them? It is certainly not DH, he is a fussy eater and wouldn't touch them.

The shed concerned is 100 feet plus down a garden which is surrounded by a six foot fence in good order, the overgrown orchard garden of older neighbours wraps round two sides of the garden and they do not even harvest their own apples and the other neighbours are a young family, whom we know well, who again have apples galore of their own and children too young to forage. The garden can only be accessed through the house or via a narrow side entrance with a six foot locked gate.

rosesare red I think you are right it is squirrels. We do have them in the garden as we have a huge hazel tree. The shed door does not close well so it would be easy for them to get in. The apples were in a plastic box on a chair. Difficult for mice to access, the usual problem, but not a squirrel. However they did not touch the carrots stored in adjacent box, although I think they may have disturbed the lid.

I need to invite Sherlock Holmes in to solve the mystery

margaretm74 Tue 11-Feb-14 09:48:41

I'd prefer Dr Watson myself.

I think rats would go for the easy option of windfalls from your neighbou's garden, if there are still any around, even half rotten ones.

whenim64 Tue 11-Feb-14 10:04:49

Squirrels! I put all my discarded apples and cores in various places round the garden and in my outbuilding which has a wide gap under the old door. It distracts them from coming near the kitchen where my strawberry beds are, and the bird feeders. My dog barks when she sees them nipping in there. The squirrels love apples. They don't leave anything behind.

Atqui Tue 11-Feb-14 14:41:32

My husband once put some seed potatoes in the shed, and we could not figure out where they had gone.some time later, when we discovered that rats had been in the shed, we discovered the shrivelled remains in a corner at the back of said shed where rats had made their nest!