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FREE ONE YEAR GUARANTEE
NOW ACCEPTING FALL PRE-ORDERS
Like many butterflies and bumblebees, wildlife animals are drawn to the sweet smell of fermenting grapes which have fallen to the ground. The muscadine grape fruits develop into clusters of many colored skins: gold, red, and blue. All of these grape skin colors work equally well when planted as a wildlife muscadine grape fruit attractant. Wildlife muscadine, grapevine plants bear enough muscadines for human consumption, and then there are plenty left over for deer, songbirds, and opossum. Muscadine grapes were often referred to by early American colonial settlers as "fox grapes" . Quail and other game birds and songbirds especially love muscadine grapes.