T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4495.1 | Sic em, Otis!.... | BOOVX1::MANDILE | | Thu Mar 28 1991 11:50 | 8 |
| Those older homes have a lot of space between the floorboards,
the walls and the studs......which unfortunately is a "haven"
for the little furry critters. If you use anything that may
poison them, they may die behind a wall & smell, or your cats might
get into the stuff. Mousetraps work, but again, they are unpleasant
and the cats might get into them.
Lynne
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4495.2 | More animals than we bargained for... | TALLIS::PARADIS | Music, Sex, and Cookies | Thu Mar 28 1991 12:28 | 23 |
| > Those older homes have a lot of space between the floorboards,
> the walls and the studs......which unfortunately is a "haven"
> for the little furry critters.
Tell me about it!! Our house is 107 years old, and recently I was
cutting thru the upstairs floor so I could run some pipe... when
I broke thru the floor and got a look inside, I noticed that the
downstairs ceiling was COVERED with rodent droppings (rat-sized
and up!) I couldn't tell if they were ancient or relatively new...
probably a combination of both... our sewer pipe broke, and I'm
positive that several sewer rats have made their way into our
house... I trapped one in the basement, and we laid out poison and
got another... and the plumber chased another one out when he was
fixing the sewer pipe. I think our rat troubles are over for now,
though....
[Yes, I know about the hazards of laying out rat poison with kitties
in the house... that's why we only laid it out in the basement. Our
kitties are NEVER allowed in the basement... too many hazards down
there for a small creature get in trouble with...]
--jim
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4495.3 | Rats and Mice in old houses are common.. | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Thu Mar 28 1991 13:04 | 72 |
| Does this ever sound lika a familiar theme!!
My house is also very old...but we aren't really sure HOW old. All we
are SURE of is that when we did some repairs on the floor in the
"mud-room", which was put on as an addition to the ORIGINAL house, we
found under the old floorboards a newspaper dated 1892!! So the
original structure is likely much older thn that... We still have a
stone foundation, and the beams that are in the cellar are SOLID 6"X6"
and are probably Chestnut...You coudn't drive a nail into them with a
machine-gun!
And, as in all of this sort of dwelling, the rodents will move in
when the weather outside gets COLD....like in the late fall, or
WET....like in the spring when the rains and melting start. We've used
mousetraps in the cabinets where the meeces find their way, but after
catching numerous of the little critters, and STILL having the problem,
I have finally come to the conclusion that poison is the ONLY way to
get rid of them.....and not just ANY poison....the one that WORKS is
"D-CON". This isn't a "plug"...I don't have a single share of "D-CON"
stock...but this is an important issue.
What I do is place a half-dozen of the "D-CON" Bait trays in the
cellar...up under the overhang or if you have an un-finished area or
access to an unfinished area that cna be closed off from the rest of
the house that is a good area. Also, many of these older houses have
either totally unfinished attics, or partially unfinished attics.
Rodents have a tendendy to hang-out in these places. The "D-CON"
actually attracts the little devils, and it is very effective.
I totally agree with the cautions about making SURE that this stuff
is NOT accessable to your pets... But I disagree that there is a
potential of a poisoned rodent causing a stink by de-composing in your
walls or some other inaccessable area. THe original "D-CON" used the
chemical "warfarin" as it's active ingredient. "Warfarin" is a blood
thinner, and is used by the medical profession to alleviate blood
clotting in stroke victims....in carefully administered dosages, to be
sure. What it did to a rodent was thin it's blood to a consistency that
it would not be contained inside the blood vessels, and it also would
increase the thirst of the animal, and more water would thin the blood
further....and the animal would literally bleed to death internally.
The reaction and ultimate death is totally painless, according to every
report that I've read, and the resulting corpse DOES NOT decompose in
the normal sense...it simply DRIES UP. When I was a kid on the farm, we
would find rat and mouse bodies that had been poisoned, and it was
almost like they'd been "freeze-dried". They were weightless, like
nothing at all except the skin and bones. When mice and rats are killed
in a house,they dry up and do not smell.
The NEW and IMPROVED "D-CON" doesn't use "Warfarin" any more....since
the little devils built up some sort of immunity to it. The new
chemical has one of those "Bi----De---Dexi-----Mega------Dupa----"
chemical names that is totaly un-pronouncable. It does the same thing
that Warfarin did, but it will kill the warfarin-resistant rodents.
"D-CON" can be purchased in the local supermarket in the same area that
they sell cleaning products and insect sprays usually. A package of 4
bait trays will run you around $5.69. Unless you rip the walls out of
your house after using it for many moons, you'll never see the dead
rodents..
How about this?? We usualy keep our dog's Milk-Bones in a cabinet
over the stove, and we have periodically had mice get in their through
some of the electrical cord access holes that former residents cut in
the wallboard. When it happens, we try to treap, then usually give up
and get the "D-CON". Usually we can tell when there are mice even if we
don't see droppings because a couple of cats will be sitting on the
stove, peering anxiously at this cabinet. SO the other night I didn't
think anything special when "Smokey" was doing that....Imagine my
disgust and absolute shock when I opened the cabinet door to see a
half-grown RAT at the milk-bones. I was shocked, but got the old
"D-CON" out and placed it in the areas noted above...rats and mice both
are effectively eliminated by this stuff!!
John McD
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4495.4 | | CSSE::MANDERSON | | Thu Mar 28 1991 13:23 | 24 |
|
That's what I am so worried about. I can just see me groping in the
dark to go to the bathroom and stumble over a mouse (or worse). Believe
me, I would drop dead of fright! Mice I can handle...rats I can't.
I am renting the house so I am going to call the Landlord and tell him
of my dilemma and let them handle the situation. If they call in
a professional exterminator (which is what I am hoping they will do) I
will send Otis and Tiffany off to the vets for a couple of days.
Besides which - I also want those holes filled.
Another question! Can they chew through the walls into the rooms?
And, if they entered in a wall - would they exit out the same way?
I have visions of me laying there in bed one night and this 'creature'
coming out of the walls.
Don't mean to sound paranoid about this (I am sounding paranoid, aren't
I!!!)....or can I rely on Otis some for taking care of the problem.
They (mice) must know there is a cat around, right????
Marilyn
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4495.5 | ... | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Thu Mar 28 1991 13:32 | 12 |
| Rats can chew through just about anything if they want to badly
enough. They have been known to chew their way into sealed food cans.
However, they usually have sufficient food around a home that they
don't need to do that. Mice, on the other hand, can get through the
tiniest little cracks that you would SWEAR that a fly couldn't get
through.
Exterminators may get rid of TODAY'S crop of rodents, but unless they
leave some sort of poison the rodents will be right back. Thats why I
don't bother with them, and use the "D-CON" on my own...
JM
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4495.6 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Mar 28 1991 13:56 | 12 |
| When I was a "starving grad student" I lived in a basement
apartment of abuilding that had mice and cockroachs. Yeeck.
I got in the habit of doing two things: (1) storing food like flour,
beans, grains, etc. in the cabinets in glass jars (mason jars,
old giant mayonaise jars)
and keeping stuff like bread in the refrigerator (toast or nowadays
microwave to warm it up). If you can remove their ability to
get to any food, you've won part of the battle and taken one worry
off your mind. Should work for teh other noters Milk Bones as well.
Come to think of it those giant metal cans that popcorn comes in
would be good for large storage.
|
4495.7 | | CSSE::MANDERSON | | Thu Mar 28 1991 14:01 | 9 |
| I have a large pantry that I am in the process of putting things like
flour, sugar, macaroni and cereals in Mason Jars. The only problem
I might have is leaving Purina Cat Chow out for Tiffany. She doesn't
eat anything else...and only on a whim. She isn't fed on a schedule
it's always out for her.
How do I break her that habit..it would probably help to solve the
problem.
|
4495.8 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Mar 28 1991 14:18 | 4 |
| Actually, i suspect Tiff may spend a good deal of her time
sitting in front of her dish waiting for a mouse snack. MAybe
this will solve your problem :-)
|
4495.9 | ....Tiffany? I don't think so! | CSSE::MANDERSON | | Thu Mar 28 1991 14:33 | 21 |
| RE: 8
...wish Tiff would get the message. She doesn't have a clue. Let's
see, a description of Tiffany. Definately a yuppie cat. She is
loveable, sweet, friendly, spoiled. She knows how to relax and it is
beneath her to 'chase' anything....or get dirty!
Otis, on the other hand, LOVES the cellar, gets high sticking his nose
and paws in dirt (i.e. potted plants), can smell food down the
street, loves water (drinking and playing in), understands the English
language perfectly, and he struts around like he's god's gift! Otis
is the one that will do the stalking...he is very alert. And, the
fact that he weighs in at 25 lbs - definately has an advantage.
My paperboy brings his dog (Drac) with him to collect on Saturday's.
Otis greeted Drac at the door last week and Otis stared him down.
The dog DID NOT move. Otis on the other hand, sniffed and checked him
out - turned his head (hrmmph) and walked into the kitchen.
M
|
4495.10 | Poison, sticky traps, mousetraps...(shudder).. | BOOVX1::MANDILE | | Thu Mar 28 1991 15:22 | 17 |
| .....The reason I am against poison is 1) I think it's
cruel causing suffering (shudder!) and 2) a dead mouse
or rat carcass from eating the "D-Con" or whatever, can
be in turn, eaten by a dog or cat, and they become poisoned.
Of course, I am a little biased as I lost a cat from
poisoned gopher bait when I was 6. They intended to
poison the gopher, only my cat ate it instead. Not
a nice thing to come home to from a family vacation...
a note from the house sitter saying my beloved pet
was gone.
Besides, it would gross me out to think of the dead
bodies behind the walls.....ugh! I'd want them out
of the house, bag n' baggage! :-) :-)
Lynne
|
4495.11 | "D-CON" does NOT cause agony!! | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Thu Mar 28 1991 16:19 | 23 |
| Re .10
You are entitled to your beliefs, but I don't agree that they are
necessarily valid. Have you ever seen a mouse that has been caught in a
trap?? I've had numerous mice maimed by the trap, yet they were alive
when I found them...bleeding and severly injured. Traps can be one of
the cruelest things ever invented...
As I also explained, the "D-CON" does NOT cause the rodents to die in
agony like Strychnine and/or Arsenic did. They first of all get
extremely thristy, and go to the place where they usually get water.
Then they go BACK to their den, where they become extremely tired, fall
asleep, and simply do not ever wake up. The poison used for Gophers
that I'm familiar with was a Strychnine-based material that not only
killed gophers, but firds, squirrels, sometimes dogs too, because it
was typically a paste that was spread on a piece of bread and left in
the gopher burrow. Neither Strychnine nor Arsenic cause the animal to
dry out...the carcass is entirely whole and IS susceptable to being
eaten by many animals--with fatal results. Unfortunately, this stuff is
still used today in the west in some areas.
JM
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4495.12 | build your own humane trap | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Mar 28 1991 18:35 | 38 |
| inadvertently, I found I'd created a humane mouse trap - one that allows you to
move the mice out of your home and release back into the wild, preferrably
far from home....
purchase a tall container with a fitted lid - plastic or metal will do, it
must have smooth sides and be at least two feet tall and opaque. Cut a small,
mouse-size whole in the top. Put about 2 inches of kibble in the container.
Place the container where your cats cannot get the mice and where the mice
can get to the container. Check it every day. You will find mice in it,
completely healthy, however a little unhappy at their predicament. Move
the container, keeping it upright, to the release location, remove the
lid of the container while pointing it AWAY FROM YOUR BODY AND FACE....
they will generally jump right out once they see daylight....or tip over
the container and they will run away. refresh your "bait" occasionally.
Keep watch on the container and you should soon remove all brave foragers
from your colony. I found a sturdy, medium sized plastic trash can with
fitted lid worked very well....of course, in my case, a mouse put the little
mouse-sized hole in the lid of the container and promptly fell in the can.
My roommate lifted the lid to fix the dogs' dinners and was hit in the
chest by the poor mouse - who was knocked back into the can. Marge shrieked
and clamped the lid back down on the can, trapping the poor little creature
again. I jumped to the rescue by moving the can outside the garage and
tilting it down, pulling off the lid, and watching one very scared mouse
run for the hills. After that, I found a mouse in the can approx. once
a week and began to drive them down the hill to the open field. In a month,
I stopped finding them - I presume I had transplanted the whole colony.
Iams dog kibble seems pretty irresistable to them. I, of course, immediately
purchased a metal can for the dog kibble - but kept our humane mouse trap
until all mice appeared gone.
re: d-con. It is, as you say, not necessarily cruel to the mice/rats, but
it can be very hazardous to the health of the small animal that eats the
mouse/rat - an increased risk because the rodents are VERY thirsty and
beginning to get sleepy....conditions geared to make them more willing to
take risks and less likely to outrun a pursuer. I believe the boxes indicate
that the bait is not considered safe around small children or pet animals...
or, at least they used to say that.
|
4495.13 | Catch them alive! | SCRUZ::DAHL_KI | | Thu Mar 28 1991 19:20 | 19 |
| The last reply reminded me of my experience with an outbreak of
mice in our apartment in downtown San Jose. We had mice all over
the apartment one winter. My husband immediately went out and bought
a bunch of traps which we placed. Well, after a couple of nights
hearing SNAP, SQUEAK, SQUEAK... I'd had enough. He got a little
upset as well when we found one little guy caught by his nose.
We went right down to Orchard Supply and bought a "Tin Cat". This
is a metal box that is designed to catch the mice alive. It worked
wonders!! The very first night we caught a little mouse, and the
next morning we took the Tin Cat, some seed and cedar shavings down
to the Guadalupe River. We were determined to give this little
guy a new home! We spent a few minutes digging up a little burrow,
lined it with cedar shavings and deposited all the seed into it.
We were so pleased with ourselves for being so kind to this little
orphan. Surprise, surprise! When we opened up the Tin Cat over
the burrow, the little mice jumped straight up and ran for his life.
Well, hopefully he eventually found his home. :)
Kim
|
4495.14 | Just MY opinions, BTW....... | BOOVX1::MANDILE | | Fri Mar 29 1991 09:08 | 15 |
| Re .12 - You misunderstood me.......I do not like poison,
mousetraps, stickytraps (Like flypaper, the mouse gets stuck
when he walks on it, and struggles to death-ugh!) or any type
that kills or causes suffering. (Including letting the cats get
them (the squeak of terror echos in my head & heart for days)
(I do what .13 does......)
Poison is poison.....and a chemically induced intense thirst
sounds (to me) like suffering....and since the mouse cannot
say whether s/he is suffering or not.........
But, I'm not attacking your use of D-CON, BTW.
Lynne
|
4495.15 | Modern technology IS sometimes good.. | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Fri Mar 29 1991 09:13 | 52 |
| Thre is no question that you will catch numerous meeces with
traps--whether they are the standard or the catch-and-release type.
However, there should be some better understanding of ehat you are
contending with here.
(1)If you have truely been infested with MICE--then you will not
cateh them all in 99.9% of the cases.
(2)If you have been infested with RATS, you will not catch them all
in 99.999999999% of the cases.
(BOTH of these species very quickly become "trap smart", and will
soon avoid the traps. It is also thought that Rats have an ability to
pass-on the instinct to avoid traps to their offspring. Rats also learn
to avoid most types of poison after a period of time....and both rats
and mice have built up a certain amount of immunity to the older type
of "D-CON", which contained "warfarin" as the killing agent, but
neither rats nor mice have 'learned' to AVOID this poison.)
(3)If---as MOST of the cases this time of year turn ot to be---you
have become host to MEADOW VOLES, or WOOD MICE, then ther IS a chance
that you may catch all of them. However, since neither of these species
typically reside in houses, except during this time of year or in the
fall when the cold may drive them out of their NATURAL habitat,(Either
brush and/or wood piles, or underground burrows) the most LIKELY result
will be that after the spring water diminishes, they will simply move
back to their natural environment on their own...
Lastly: There have NEVER been any reported cases of a pet eating a
rodent killed by "D-CON". Unless a dog were to dig out a burrow of
freshly killed mice, and have aberrent taste preferences, the
possibility of this occurring is about nil. The carcass of a "D-CON"
killed rodent has an odor that is unpleasant to dogs and cats, and
unless the body is discovered within a day of the demise, there won't
be anything left to eat anyway.
The animals that have been killed that DO present a problem are those
killed by OTHER types of poisons. People still us Arsenic paste,
Strychnine, and some other types of posons, which not only leave dead
bodies that are attrctive to dogs and cats, but the poisons themselves
may be eaten by animals other than those they are intended to kill.
Recent studies indicate that MANY animals and birds such as Eagles and
Hawks have been killed over the past years form eating this sort of
kill.
However, to analogize a bit....
These "old" poisons are the WWII, Korea and Viet Nam's of the war on
rodents... "D-CON", on the other hand, is the "DESERT STORM" technology
of the rodent war...it AINT the same old stuff!!
JM
|
4495.16 | I never knew they smelled different! | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Mar 29 1991 12:09 | 20 |
| > Lastly: There have NEVER been any reported cases of a pet eating a
> rodent killed by "D-CON". Unless a dog were to dig out a burrow of
> freshly killed mice, and have aberrent taste preferences, the
> possibility of this occurring is about nil. The carcass of a "D-CON"
> killed rodent has an odor that is unpleasant to dogs and cats, and
> unless the body is discovered within a day of the demise, there won't
> be anything left to eat anyway.
I didn't know that....better living through chemistry for sure! Luckily,
our residential area is relatively new and the only kind of rodents we see
in our homes are the field mice-type....of course, in the future we can
look forward to roof rats moving in - but not until the trees get bigger...
For general information: one area that even the most conscientious
housekeepers seem to overlook is the pet food connection. Purchase a
METAL trash container big enough to keep your cat/dog food and make sure
the lid FITS. Place the bag of pet food in the container and keep it covered.
The best way to deter infestations is to keep food as unavailable as possible.
The small (approx. 20 gal size) metal trash cans I purchased are the best
investment I've ever made in controlling infestations.
|
4495.17 | .. | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Fri Mar 29 1991 13:26 | 20 |
| Re .16
Well, that's what I saw in an article on the stuff....I've never
actually 'sniffed' a dead mouse..;-)
I totally agree that there ARE some things that you can do to
alleviate the rodent intrusions. Leaving food of any kind exposed is an
invitation to them...and "food" is a broad definition when it comes to
rodents. Trash collected to be disposed of is a good attractor, as is
dog/bird/bunny/horse//goat/cow or any other animal food. Rats 'n mice
are not finicky eaters...about anything will do.
Metal containers, sealed glass jars, etc are good storage containers.
In some of these 'old' houses though, there are so many holes and
nooks and crannys that they can get into that it is hard to totally
eliminate them.. With 5 cats in the house you'd think they would have
more sense than to even try to come in...but no such luck...we still
get some every year...
JM
|
4495.18 | Not mice...but ants! | FORUM::ANDERSON | | Mon Sep 23 1991 16:06 | 11 |
| An update to this note:
Found out that it wasn't mice that Otis was sniffing - but he had found
an 'ants' nest in the wall. They only came out (the ants) from the
nest in Spring!
Though they can be pesty...at best it's better than facing a mouse
in the middle of the night.
M
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