While deer are often a welcome sight, it’s not a fantastic point to find the shirts of your precious tomato plants (Solanum lycopersicum) and their fruits eaten for them. Deer will eat just about any foliage they can get when they’re really hungry, and your tomato plants are no exception. Many solutions exist which keep deer away from the tomatoes, but they work better when used in combination together.
Hammer wooden stakes firmly to the ground around the tomato plants or around the garden perimeter. The number of bets you will need depends on the size of this garden, but use enough to encourage the net. Wrap black plastic mesh closely around the outside of one stake and secure it in multiple factors with string, twine or wire. Pull the net tight to the next stake and secure it. Repeat this procedure until it’s secured to all of the stakes. The bets and mesh should be at least 8 ft high, and the net should pay for the complete length of the bets to avoid the deer from crawling under or jumping over the fence.
Fill out a pump sprayer with 1 part hot sauce and 16 parts water. Spray the tomato plants thoroughly until they’re dripping with all the solution on a calm moment. Reapply the solution after periods of rain. This solution won’t harm the crops or the bull.
Fill a set of nylon stockings with a strong-scented pub soap and then hang it around your tomato plants within 3 feet of every plant. In case you have nothing to hang it hammer a stake into the soil next to the tomato crops or use a tomato cage. Human hair left from cutting also has the same effect. The scent might discourage algae, but you have to replace the hair after heavy rains. Replace the soap when it melts. These methods aren’t necessarily effective, but might provide some security when used properly.