fpb: (Default)
fpb ([personal profile] fpb) wrote2008-08-02 07:40 pm

(no subject)

Of all the things I hate about running your own house, mouse infestations are what I hate the most. Not the mice themselves, but the means you have to use to get rid of them. I had hoped two years ago to have seen an end to it, but recently I had evidence of more visitations. A certain amount of poison feed seemed to have dealt with that. But a few days ago I heard the distinctive rustle, and today I saw with my own eyes one of the culprits in the kitchen, which is of course the last place where you want to see a mouse. Unfortunately, the way I had available to deal with the problem - left over from two years back - is the cruellest of all the traps: the glue trap. There is nothing pleasant about having to take away a tiny, desperately squealing creature, stuck in a devil's brew and mad with terror. Mice, when helpless, are very appealing. But people like me are in no position to excuse them; if the place is not made unwelcome to mice, not only is your health and food at risk, but you are in danger of opening it to rats - which is plain ruination. And yet... if I could have seen a way to keep the pathetic robber in a cage without inviting any of his mates or finding out too late that it was pregnant (at which they are very efficient), I likely enough would have kept it.

[identity profile] stigandnasty919.livejournal.com 2008-08-02 11:03 pm (UTC)(link)
I didn't think the sticky traps were available any more. I recall, some twenty years ago, getting a tin of some evil yellow substance from a friend who worked for rent-o-kill. We spread the stuff onto a sheet of cardboard about 1m x 1m which was then placed in the middle of the kitchen floor. Then put chocolate in the centre of the sheet. The mice must have literally thrown themselves at it. We guessed that they must have been climbing onto the kitchen table and leaping towards the chocolate. Perhaps we were invaded by a family of mice with a particularly sweet tooth, but chocolate as bait was the key to catching them.

[identity profile] bdunbar.livejournal.com 2008-08-03 12:33 am (UTC)(link)
They're available in the US, in Wisconsin at least. Our facilities guys use them at work.

And we need them - our office building is in a bit of woods, next to a slough - we have a lot of wildlife in the area and some it wants very badly to live indoors.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2008-08-03 08:45 am (UTC)(link)
Our local household goods and DIY shops do a brisk business in them, and in mouse traps generally, which tells you something about our part of London. The ones I use are made of rigid cardboard spread with glue on one side which folds along three lines, forming a triangular cardboard tunnel. Place it in places where the mouse has to pass and, bingo! One stuck (and terrified) mouse. On the whole, I would rather use spring traps, which kill them quick, but this lot works.