
What can the moles cause? You might have answered this question with "damage", but let's take a closer look at why many people are so angry! For example, they kill insects, beetles and ringworms in the soil. These could be seen as positive attributes, if worms were not the most desirable thing to eat. They are the ones they eat the most of. Worms are very important for increasing soil fertility. This fact is particularly important for growers, as those who do not grow anything but want a nice, lawn may not be interested in the fate of worms.
In their search for food, they turn the soil upside down and we have to suffer not only the aesthetic consequences of this, of course, the mole burrow is not a pretty sight. However, they cause much greater material damage to crops and arable land. Farmers lose a lot of income and even more time spent on careful sowing of seeds.

What can you do against moles? The sight of mole burrows makes most people think of exterminating moles. It's understandable to be annoyed, because no one is patient when a freshly laid lawn is covered with huge, unesthetically pleasing mounds of soil. People work hard to keep their gardens beautiful and farmers work hard to keep their vegetables healthy. As upsetting as it is to turn freshly sown tender seeds out of the soil, as expensive as turf grass was, there should be no fatal way to remove the moles from gardens and farmland.
Moles are not a threatened species in terms of their ecological status, but they have been protected for many years and their nature protection value is 25.000 HUF per specimen.
So their destruction is no small offence. agricultural sector interviewed Dr. Zsuzsanna Némethy, a certified plant protection engineer, on this matter. What is the solution if neither gas alarms or traps and poisons are useless? The specialist engineer said that various alarm devices are the best, but that care must be taken to ensure that enough devices are deployed to drive the mole in the desired direction and at the right distance, not just from one end of the garden to the other.
Our testing and research confirms the words of Dr Zsuzsanna Némethy, a specialist engineer. That is why we have developed a vibration-based mole alarm. Its operation is simple: it emits disturbing mechanical vibrations into the mole's habitat that keep it at rest. So, sooner or later, you'll be forced to pick up your tent and move on.
You wouldn't want to live in a permanent earthquake, would you? Check out the Vadalarm Mole Repeller and order it