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Safe, reliable, inexpensive
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 Tagbak Sensor |
Harmlessly
repels rabbit, deer, coyote, raccoon, dogs, cats, and other animals.
Tagbak uses infrared, motion-sensing technology to turn on your
sprinklers the moment movement is detected.
That landscaping job isn’t
complete! That new lawn and garden may be at risk of getting devoured by creatures that love your new landscaping as much as you do. Adding a Tagbak system can greatly reduce the frequency and severity of animal related damage so you can enjoy the wonders of nature, and not be at odds with it.
Environmentally friendly and humane
We’re rather fond of animals here at Tagbak. Our goal was to create an effective yet totally safe way to address problems with rabbit, deer, and yes, even the neighbor’s dog, without causing any harm whatsoever. The sprinklers simply come on the moment unwelcome paws step onto your lawn. It’s that simple. The system activates only when it needs to and can be set to go on for as little as 10 seconds, just enough time to do the job while conserving water. Tagbak will stay on longer only when motion persists.
Build a Virtual Fence
With Tagbak, we can build a virtual fence around a lawn, garden, or most anything else for that matter. The moment a moving, living creature passes through the row of sensors, sprinklers surge on, instantly repelling the intruder.
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Saves Money $$$
Save your landscaping! |

Tagbak protected garden |
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Using passive infrared technology, Tagbak “goes on the
hunt” all night watching over your yard so you won’t
have to.
By helping to prevent damage, Tagbak can save you money and effort
in repairing and replanting unsightly destruction.
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From: Karen Brawley
To: info@tagbak.com
Subject: Thanks for the Tagbak system
Date: Wednesday, May 30, 2007 10:08:35 PM
Rick,
I just wanted to let you know that the Tagbak system you installed in our yard has been a huge success. We have
the nicest looking lawn in the area thanks to the system's effectiveness in keeping the rabbits at bay. We lost
hundreds of dollars (not to mention time) putting in grass, only to lose it all to the rabbits. Even with chicken wire and rabbit fencing placed around the grass, the results were less than desirable. I was never happy with the thought of putting rabbit fencing all around my yard. Your fast response when we called was much appreciated. Unless one lives out here in the country as we do, it is hard to understand just how many rabbits we are inundated with. With your system working as well as it does, we can now sleep at night and not worry that the grass will be eaten up by
the critters. It works to keep the ground squirrels off the grass also. My husband and I cannot thank you enough for your dedication to helping us and your prompt and courteous response to every concern we initially had. We
couldn't be happier with the system. Good luck to you and please feel free to use us as a reference any time.
Sincerely,
Karen Brawley
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| Robyn H. Wildomar, CA |
Miguel A. Temecula, CA |
Ruth H. Wildomar, CA |
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| Robin W. Wildomar, CA |
A virtual fence. Troy R. Ramona, CA |
Hal G. Murrieta, CA |
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| Wayne B. Murrieta, CA |
Ginger and Bob C. Wildomar, CA |
Bob P. Fallbrook, CA |
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| Dana N. Lake Ellsinore, CA |
Bill and Lucinda P. Wildomar, CA |
John B. Murrieta, CA |
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| Karen B. Temecula, CA |
Virtual Fence at nursery- Fallbrook, CA |
Jim B. Nuevo, CA |


Photo: Lucette Moramarco photo
Wildomar resident Richard Miller has come up with a foolproof way to keep rabbits from destroying landscape.
By Patty McCormac
12/29/2006 1:47:26 PM
Elmer Fudd is not the only one tormented by pesky rabbits. Richard Miller stood by helplessly watching the varmints feast away at $60,000 worth of landscaping at his new Wildomar home.
My lawn looked like a "B" movie – "The Attack of the Rabbits." I don’t know how to describe it, but it was lumpy, bumpy. It looked like it was being carved. The lawn was being ravaged," he said.
Miller refused to take drastic measures against the furry little intruders. "Nobody wants to hurt rabbits," he said.
His landscaper recommended a product called Liquid Fence, which Miller believed is supposed to scare rabbits away because it smells like coyote urine.
"I can tell you it certainly repels humans," he said with a laugh, speaking of the stench of the product. He also found it too labor-intensive because it had to be applied frequently after rain or watering.
"I couldn’t see where it was effective
e reducing the number of rabbits. I was literally watching my investment turn into little round pellets – which, ironically, were fertilizing the now-barren patches."
It was the family’s toy fox terrier, Toya, who gave Miller the idea of how to rid his property of rabbits without harming a hair on those little bunny heads.
Miller is the inventor of Tagbak, a system that activates sprinklers by infrared sensors, which discourages graffiti at monuments, vulnerable walls and other locations by, in a sense, "tagging back," the taggers, he said. Think of the watering system at a grocer’s produce case, but with more gusto.
While his owner was developing the system now in use all over the country, Toya kept walking through and activating the sprinklers, which Miller found annoying at the time. But it was that annoyance that developed into the system that would send rabbits running.
"It was serendipity," Miller said. "Rabbits are a little bit like taggers. If you successfully chase them off your property, they simply do their damage elsewhere."
Miller installed an infrared sensor in a fake boulder in his yard. When the sensor feels a warm little body like a rabbit or two, it tells the sprinkler system to start immediately.
"I replaced one of my sprinkler heads with an impact sprinkler. That sprinkler springs to life like a spitting cobra. It’s like a water machine gun raking across my lawn. Rabbits bolt. It’s a sight to behold," he said.
The sprinklers stay on for five or 20 seconds (the customer decides how long), and the system comes on only when needed and instantly fends off the intruder, Miller said. No need to waste water, claims Miller; Tagbak stays on longer only when motion persists.
Miller has had his own system installed for about a year and now he can sleep at night without worrying about his landscaping. "It’s come back to life," he said.
The success at his own home has led to other people looking at the technology. Miller is in the process of installing a system with 22 sensors on a three-acre property.
He prefers noisy sprinkler systems like a clattery, chugging rain bird that pops out of the ground and starts shooting water across the property. It gives the rabbits no place to hide, Miller said.
The basic system like the one at his home costs about $400 total. It works not only for rabbits but for deer, coyote, raccoons, dogs, cats and even unwanted people who may take shortcuts through property.
To learn more about the Tagbak system visit www.tagbak.com or call Miller at (951) 696-4536.
"Now I look at rabbits differently because they mean business," he said.
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Applications: |
- Commercial
- Residential
- Farming
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- Nursery
- Home-owners associations
- New home developments
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Tagbak requires the following:
Access to 110v AC
Standard solenoid controlled
sprinkler line (non-pulse system) |

Tagbak sensor and transformer,
and custom-order rock sensor unit.
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www.animalfriendsofthevalleys.com

Animal and Graffiti Deterrent Systems
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