Liquid ammonia used for this purpose is household cleaning type of ammonia. This should not harm trees at all as your application will be exterior spraying lightly on the surface of the bark of the trees and not soaking the ground with the ammonia in order to reach the roots. A different form of ammonia called ammonium nitrate is a type of fertilizer that is use to feed all types of plants. This type is a mixture of ammonia and nitrogen and is pelletized most of the time for the purpose of feeding. In the manner you are applying it should not harm the trees at all.
No, raccoons may eat fruits and nuts produced by trees but they do not eat trees.
Fruit trees, nut bearing trees and plants that produce berries attract raccoons.
No, raccoons do not eat trees. However, they will eat fruits and nuts provided by trees. They are particularly fond of acorns.
Raccoons are opportunistic feeders and may find their food anywhere, including in trees or water.
Yes, when fruit is ripe the raccoons have a great interest in eating it.
Yes, raccoons sleep in trees because it is high and away from predators. But trees are not always the only place they sleep. Anywhere hidden away from predators they will sleep.
Raccoons will nest in hollow trees when available but also will den in burrows, culverts, in attics and crawl spaces in homes, etc. If threatened they will climb trees to escape harm.
raccoons live near streams, or rivers and lots of trees bushes, and usually have dens in weird places like under decks.
Raccoons are primarily nocturnal animals. During the day the animals would normally be sleeping in their dens, not in trees. They would only climb trees to escape a predator or to obtain food.
Raccoons live mainly in dens, or in hollow trees.
Combine mint flavored mouthwash, lemon dish soap and lemon ammonia in equal parts. Put the mixture into a spray bottle and spray your yard. Spray it on the grass, bushes, trees, lawn furniture and plants. This solution is also not harmful to plants or animals. The smell is appealing to humans but repels horse flies.
Raccoons are opportunistic and will use a variety of locations for a den including abandoned burrows of other animals, hollow trees, caves, rock crevices, storm sewers, abandoned buildings, attics, etc.