My cat left me a big fat dead rat on the floor yesterday morning. Costs more than a trap, but more versatile. If I could only train the cat to leave it outside.
I think mice are cute. And so does one of my cats. He plays with them until they die of exhaustion.
Cute, however, does not make up for the damage they cause. I put poison down in the garage and rely on the cats in the house. I haven’t seen one in the house for quite a while but all the cats are lining up at the garage door as they usually do that this time of year. Sigh. I’ve got mice out there again. Must go refill the poison traps.
For 3 years (2000-2003) I lived in a trailer in a forest. There were always mouses running around. I always had a number of snap-traps set in strategic places (including several underneath the trailer), and they caught mouses all the time. One of my weekly Saturday rituals was to check them all and replace all the traps that had done their jobs. This kept the mouse population down to a tolerable level. I was satisfied with that. As long as the mouse population was finite and fairly small, that was okay with me.
There was one mouse once who seemed to be snap-trap wise. For several weeks he was running around and never took the bait. For him, I finally caved and bought a glue trap. In just a few days, that got him.
I agree with some of the posts above: From what I can guess, snap-traps seem to be fast and relatively merciful. The glue trap looked like a horrible slow torture device straight out of an Edgar Allan Poe horror story.
That trailer was also infested (when I first moved in) with little green tree frogs. You would not belieeeeeeve how loud they are!!! I spent months catching them (just one at a time now and then) and either tossing them out into the forest, or angrily stomping them because of the noise they made. Eventually, they all were gone and no more came back again.
The area surrounding the trailer was massively infested with ants (mostly Argentine ants, but there was also a carpenter ant colony somewhere nearby). For some reason, they hardly ever came inside – I think maybe twice in three years I had indoor ant visitors.
Almost every fall we get mice in our house. I think they just want in from the cold. We’ve always had cats who would catch them or at least let us know there’s one trapped under a radiator however this year we have a spry little one year old cat who I think is eating them. I assume so because she had a good dose of tape worms last week and she’s strictly an indoor cat.
I use the black plastic snap traps in the garage. I much prefer them to the old wood and wire traps. The plastic traps are much easier to set and release any unfortunate victims.
I also had to explain some cruel facts about vermin extermination to my 6 year old son. He gave me heck for “wasting nature” but when I explained that the mice wanted to nest in our camper trailer he was quite fine with daddy taking care of the problem.
you need to check traps frequently. a sprung trap is a nonfunctioning trap. live mice will eat the bait in the sprung trap and eat on the dead mouse. check every day or two.
I usually have one or two in the fall. This year I had some critters in the attic, which is hard for me to get to. I think that they are finally all gone, I no longer hear them scurrying around.
So, my brother and his imported wife have visited a few times since they married three years ago. In between life is pretty darn uneventful. Coincidental with one of their visits came those tiny ants that teem everywhere, prompting me to rise up and violently discard food that had been near them. Two visits later, I see mouse poop in the utensil and gadget drawers, prompting me to rise up and violently dump the contents into the sink and scrub them all. These people must think I’m nuts and/or a crappy housekeeper.
They might be right.
Anyhoo, we’ve only ever seen one mouse and he avoids the humane trap laden with peanut butter. One doesn’t bother me as long as he stays out of the drawers.
Mice can squeeze through really small openings, so if that plate your handyman put down it not completely flush with the floor, poke steel wool in wherever you can.
I had some kind of critter in my attic this year. When I brought down my winter clothes, one of the bags had a bunch of pokeberry seeds in it.