balloonshark
Diamond Member
My money is on the mouse. 😛This mouse is making me feel kind of stupid. But one day I'll bury it. Watched Gangs of New York yesterday, I have a little hangover from it. 😉
My money is on the mouse. 😛This mouse is making me feel kind of stupid. But one day I'll bury it. Watched Gangs of New York yesterday, I have a little hangover from it. 😉
This mouse is making me feel kind of stupid. But one day I'll bury it. Watched Gangs of New York yesterday, I have a little hangover from it. 😉
115 year old house. Mouse proofing it would be impossible.Wouldn't it be best to find out how they are getting in the house?
Had one in my house ONCE in 2007. A small gap hidden by the vinyl siding in an corner after adding an addition. That corner was done by my father in law. Oops, but it was free labor.
I had always felt cold air coming in in that area, and my cats would go crazy in that area. so we knew where to look. He only got in the one wall bay, stashing his acorns. Pain to remove the whole corner and adjacent siding. Haven't had on before or since. And we live in the woods.
Your not kidding, are you? When Moms was still alive and still able to get around on her walker, I would see a mouse bound across the floor in my own room, and then later -- saw one jump across the floor from a couch to space under Moms' hospital bed. I put out traps, and probably caught a couple. Then one evening, I was in the kitchen which adjoins the den where Moms slept. There was a plastic grocery bag on the kitchen floor and I was startled with two young mice pups that had somehow dropped onto that bag.Glue traps are as cruel as a trap can be . They guarantee a lot of struggling, torn flesh, and suffering. Death is very slow. I had a client use one and when I arrived she came out crying and asked me to end the mousses suffering. Fucking things should be illgeal.
Yo, I get where you're coming from with the squirrels. Some people think they're cute and adorable. I grow tomatoes too. For quite a few years they seemed to pretty much leave my tomatoes alone but where major problem for my yearly summer kabocha squash patch. Once a squirrel had enjoyed one of them they'd come back, pretty much daily for another attack. I'd lose a lot of the crop to them. I declared war. I've shot a couple, I guess, with my single loader pellet gun. I've caught some in my have-a-heart trap and released in the hills. I've caught a couple in rat traps, dead.Life is hard enough so I don't fret over "cruelty to rodents". I don't tolerate ground squirrels in my garden, either. I poison the F***ers! I don't care how "social" and intelligent they are. Tomatoes are far more valuable.
They are likely more durable but the Hdama have a feature I really like, removable bait container. Just received 6 of them yesterday. I also got 6I just ordered these, 6 pack. Appear to be more durable than the Hdama traps.
If you have anywhere close to 18, I'd say you're living in their house. Hope they don't have a Muse trap...They are likely more durable but the Hdama have a feature I really like, removable bait container. Just received 6 of them yesterday. I also got 6
Victor Power-Kill Humane Mouse Traps M393SSR. Have 18 new mouse traps that are far easier to set and are far better designs that the old wood plate traps I've always used. Caught one mouse so far. I think there are probably more in the house, will see.
Try securing the bait in a bit of fine mesh. I raided my wife's sewing supplies and got some "wedding veil" mesh. (AKA tulle) Put the bait inside the mesh, tie or otherwise secure that to the trigger. They MIGHT be able to lick off any peanut butter that oozes through the mesh, but they can't steal the bait.I have a few traps with string tied around the bait plate to hold on whatever. Used with bits of bacon in the past. I've had a lot of traps' bait cleaned out without tripping, rat and mouse.
I've got all kinds of stuff like that, I think nylon screen material would work.Try securing the bait in a bit of fine mesh. I raided my wife's sewing supplies and got some "wedding veil" mesh. (AKA tulle) Put the bait inside the mesh, tie or otherwise secure that to the trigger. They MIGHT be able to lick off any peanut butter that oozes through the mesh, but they can't steal the bait.
I really like cats but don't want the responsibility. Feeding, vet trips and bills, and what to do about if I leave the house for days, even weeks.Get a cat, mine find mice on occasion and bring them to me so I can take them outside 😛
Yeah it's a different lifestyle, worth it if you love them, but not for everyone.I really like cats but don't want the responsibility. Feeding, vet trips and bills, and what to do about if I leave the house for days, even weeks.
Oh, I do love them but there's the other side of it. If I got a cat it would probably be two cats. I hear they do a lot better if they have a companion cat. They'd probably be very young siblings.Yeah it's a different lifestyle, worth it if you love them, but not for everyone.
They do, two or more is best.Oh, I do love them but there's the other side of it. If I got a cat it would probably be two cats. I hear they do a lot better if they have a companion cat. They'd probably be very young siblings.
So far I've only caught one mouse this year, it was maybe a year or two since I'd had a mouse problem at all. Plenty of evidence downstairs including two small kabocha squash having been utterly eaten, nothing but the shell of the husk left. Caught that one mouse downstairs. Now, in my bedroom I saw with my own eyes a mouse traversing the carpet in the middle of the room, several times. I put traps in the room but nothing happened.If you have anywhere close to 18, I'd say you're living in their house. Hope they don't have a Muse trap...
BTW, I also have a cat. She does mice pretty well too.
I've used WILCO bait traps and poison --- very effective. Now I can't buy it in California, but there's a place in Florida that ships it, and I have enough bags of it for another couple years' deployment. See it's one thing to support the Environmental Defense Fund, the National Wildlife Federation and other worthy groups. But if you want to grow tomatoes, you have to make practical decisions . . . . NAMELY -- KILL THE LITTLE BASTARDS!Yo, I get where you're coming from with the squirrels. Some people think they're cute and adorable. I grow tomatoes too. For quite a few years they seemed to pretty much leave my tomatoes alone but where major problem for my yearly summer kabocha squash patch. Once a squirrel had enjoyed one of them they'd come back, pretty much daily for another attack. I'd lose a lot of the crop to them. I declared war. I've shot a couple, I guess, with my single loader pellet gun. I've caught some in my have-a-heart trap and released in the hills. I've caught a couple in rat traps, dead.
I discovered a remedy on the internet that pretty much works. Simmer some hot pepper flakes in water for a couple minutes, sieve out the flakes and put the juice in spray bottle and spray the squash. The squirrels hate the hot taste in their mouth and don't come for seconds. I spray every week or two during the time the attacks would happen, which is when they are closing in on full ripeness.
Last summer, I lost a fair proportion of my hanging tomatoes to some rodent. I don't know if it was squirrels or rats. I put out traps but caught only one. I figure it's apt to happen next growing season. Don't know what I'll do. Yet. Maybe the pepper spray, just wash the tomatoes before eating or cooking with them if it wipes out most of the pepper hotness. I don't think I want to mess with poison.
Last summer I made great efforts to kill the perps with rat traps but with practically no success. I'd sometimes have traps that were sprung but no sign of a dead rodent, be it squirrel or rat. I don't want to go to poison, don't know if I could even get any. I figure artful use of traps should have some positive effect. I recently bought 18 rat traps with plastic bases and steel head crushers, from 3 different manufacturers (6 + 6 + 6). My garage floor is covered with hundreds of what I figure are rat turds.I've used WILCO bait traps and poison --- very effective. Now I can't buy it in California, but there's a place in Florida that ships it, and I have enough bags of it for another couple years' deployment. See it's one thing to support the Environmental Defense Fund, the National Wildlife Federation and other worthy groups. But if you want to grow tomatoes, you have to make practical decisions . . . . NAMELY -- KILL THE LITTLE BASTARDS!
Last summer I made great efforts to kill the perps with rat traps but with practically no success. I'd sometimes have traps that were sprung but no sign of a dead rodent, be it squirrel or rat. I don't want to go to poison, don't know if I could even get any. I figure artful use of traps should have some positive effect. I recently bought 18 rat traps with plastic bases and steel head crushers, from 3 different manufacturers (6 + 6 + 6). My garage floor is covered with hundreds of what I figure are rat turds.