If you have raised beds, just make sure they're a couple feet off the ground. If they aren't, you can add fencing of some sort, so the top of the fencing is two feet off the ground.
For an in-ground garden, you cannot simply put up a fence, they WILL dig under it. There are rolls of wire fencing (called rabbit guard I think) that have smaller openings in the bottom than the top, so the rabbits can't squeeze through at ground level and bury it a few inches below ground.
The easiest thing to do is also the most sustainable. Spread clover seed before a few days of rain are forecast in the spring, and keep your lawn as tall as the city lets you. The rabbits would rather eat clover or alfalfa than your veggies. They stopped eating our flowers after I gave them more clover to eat :an-eco-heart:
If you have raised beds, just make sure they're a couple feet off the ground. If they aren't, you can add fencing of some sort, so the top of the fencing is two feet off the ground.
For an in-ground garden, you cannot simply put up a fence, they WILL dig under it. There are rolls of wire fencing (called rabbit guard I think) that have smaller openings in the bottom than the top, so the rabbits can't squeeze through at ground level and bury it a few inches below ground.
The easiest thing to do is also the most sustainable. Spread clover seed before a few days of rain are forecast in the spring, and keep your lawn as tall as the city lets you. The rabbits would rather eat clover or alfalfa than your veggies. They stopped eating our flowers after I gave them more clover to eat :an-eco-heart: