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Old 06-09-2007, 09:45 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Mary Fisher Mary Fisher is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,441
Default There's a rat in the compost ...


"Granity" wrote in message
...

Mary Fisher;745423 Wrote:
"Perry O'Dontal-Surgery" wrote in message
...-
... what am I going to do?

I disturbed a small one a few weeks ago - it was sat atop the pile
when I
removed the lid from our green compost bin. I kept quiet about it,
knowing
the furore it would cause amongst the female members of the
household,-

?

I saw a rat today, walking vfrom under the hen coop and under the log
pile
under the bread oven. I didn't do whatever the verb from 'furore' is
:-)
-
Mr Death of Rats from the council has been today, and put down poison.
He
has advised us not to put any fruit or veg trimmings in the bin. Seems
to
me we might as well not bother with a compost bin in that case.-

And not much point in putting down poison. The rat you saw might eat it
and
die but more rats will move in - Nature abbhors a vacuum is especially
trued
in respect of rats.

You can buy a rat trap - like a mouse trap only bigger. They're
effective.
But only for so long (see above).-

I'm more inclined to resite the bin atop a rubble foundation, to make
it
hard if not impossible to burrow into. What is exercising me most at
the
moment is this: if rats have been living in my compost heap for a
while
now, and adding their own potentially Weyl-laden excreta to it, is
the
existing compost still fit to be spread upon the garden at all?-

You're very unlikely to be infected by Weil's disease in that
situation.
You're more likely to be infected by human-borne diseases.

Mary


Buy a Jack Rusell, problem solved,


Not for us, thanks!

A trap is much cheaper and doesn't need feeding and 'exercising' - i.e.
taken to someone else's property to dump.

Any dog would freak our hens.

Dogs can carry disease ...

:-)

Mary




--
Granity