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To Shoo, or Shoot, Dogged Rabbits?

The Region

January 06, 2003|Dave McKibben, Times Staff Writer

The bunnies wander in from the neighboring golf course at all hours, hiding from the coyotes and hawks in the steep slopes that surround the Mission Viejo retirement community of Casta del Sol.

After getting their fill of native shrubs and plants, the rabbits move on to the landscaped yards, gnawing on lawns, pansies, petunias, lobelias and even small lemon trees.


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"It's like a smorgasbord around here," said John Kiely, the Casta del Sol homeowners association president. "There's a variety here they don't get anywhere else."

Landscapers in the 1,900-home tract have tried to make the menu as unappetizing as possible, sprinkling blood meal, hot sauce, garlic spray and coyote urine on lawns and plants.

But the rabbits keep trooping out of the hillsides, devouring grass and littering sidewalks and patios with their droppings.

Powerless to close up the popular rabbit dining hall, a group of residents asked the city for permission to control the intruders another way: Shoot 'em on sight. A state Fish and Game law, however, prohibits the use of firearms to ward off animals unless crops are at stake. In 1997, the city extended that law to include pellet guns.

So City Councilman John Paul Ledesma -- facetiously, perhaps -- suggested residents of the retirement community plant rows of carrots and then reapply for permission to shoot the rabbits with pellet guns.

In the end, with no freshly planted carrots to fall back on, Ledesma voted with the rest of the council in October to deny Casta del Sol's request for a waiver to the city's 1997 firearms ordinance.

All of which leaves residents divided over whether to try again for permission to shoot the rabbits, or hang it up.

Without permission to use pellet guns, and with other methods having failed them, exasperated Casta del Sol residents have relied on poison bait boxes to control the teeming rabbit population. But the 100 plastic boxes scattered through the 486-acre community will be picked up in a few months because of a change in state regulations.

Last year, state officials revised the approved uses of diphacinone, determining it should be banned in urban settings. Diphacinone is a powder that when mixed with bait becomes an attractive meal to animals but ultimately causes them to slowly bleed to death. Pest-control companies are permitted to use diphacinone until their current supply runs out, but city officials have discouraged its continued use.

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