I had a problem last year with the invasive Japanese Beetle attacking my hazel trees. I decided to feed the moles on my land to increase their population. Moles eat beetle grubs and prefer them over worms which are their traditional food. So to let the mole population boom, I dumped soaked chicken feed into their holes, mulched a section of my yard to increase the worm population, and allowed some land to go unmowed to provide them with cover. Since doing this, the Japanese beetles have not come back in any great numbers. But I now see chubby little moles all the time.
Now, I don't want them eating my potatoes or my corn, so I sprout seeds before planting them, and grow tubers in buckets. And moles do me the favor of killing the beetle grubs. Moles are not a problem, they are a solution to a problem. Just a bit of common sense is all you need to prevent them eating your crops. If you sprout your grains and coat them in cinnamon, the moles won't bother it. They don't like cinnamon and a sprouted seed will pass the point at which moles would want to eat them before the cinnamon breaks down. Moles like their food plain and cinnamon is no joke if you get too much in your mouth at once.
I've watched enough Wallace and Gromit to know that rabbits and moles are an existential threat to British gardeners. But if we make some minor adjustments, maybe we can befriend the chubby little rodents instead of fearing them. Now if you'll excuse me, I am taking a course on how to talk to tea drinkers. Today we're discussing the weather and how hating rain brings them together as a social unit.