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~Brian~ 07-12-2009 11:05 AM

Interesting
 
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch. Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)

~Brian~



alan.holmes 07-12-2009 03:58 PM

Interesting
 

"~Brian~" wrote in message
om...
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch.
Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)


I've been using peanut butter for ages and it is very effective.

Alan




~Brian~





Rusty Hinge[_2_] 07-12-2009 06:17 PM

Interesting
 
alan.holmes wrote:
"~Brian~" wrote in message
om...
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch.
Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)


I've been using peanut butter for ages and it is very effective.

Alan



~Brian~




I warm the metal prong of a steel trap, and press a piece of milk
chocolate onto it.

That's very effective too.

--
Rusty

shazzbat 07-12-2009 06:59 PM

Interesting
 

"alan.holmes" wrote in message
...

"~Brian~" wrote in message
om...
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch.
Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)


I've been using peanut butter for ages and it is very effective.


As are sunflower seeds.

Steve


beccabunga 07-12-2009 07:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ~Brian~ (Post 871369)
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch. Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)

~Brian~

Chocolate drops always worked! But I then to drive a good two miles in order to let the little brutes loose; Dropping them over the wall only meant they were back within 24 hours.

NB It is illegal to release vermin into the wild, whether or not the vermin came in from the wild.

Dave Hill 07-12-2009 09:15 PM

Interesting
 
On 7 Dec, 18:59, "shazzbat" wrote:
"alan.holmes" wrote in message

...



"~Brian~" wrote in message
. com...
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch.
Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)


I've been using peanut butter for ages and it is very effective.


As are sunflower seeds.

Steve


I go back to basics and just use peanuts
David Hill

No Name 07-12-2009 09:34 PM

Interesting
 
Dave Hill wrote:
I go back to basics and just use peanuts


Peanut butter is less likely to roll off, and harder for them to nick
without setting off the trap.

Rusty Hinge[_2_] 07-12-2009 09:56 PM

Interesting
 
beccabunga wrote:
~Brian~;871369 Wrote:
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into
the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in
the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch.
Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of
the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)

~Brian~


Chocolate drops always worked! But I then to drive a good two miles in
order to let the little brutes loose; Dropping them over the wall only
meant they were back within 24 hours.

NB It is illegal to release vermin into the wild, whether or not the
vermin came in from the wild.


True, but are fieldmice classed as vermin? (Or are they like weeds, nice
ickle things, but in the wrong place?)

And I'd like to know why the RSPCA are allowed to release sackfuls of
urban foxen into the wild, where they just die due to lack of their
usual prey, the urban dustbin.

--
Rusty

Tom 08-12-2009 08:58 PM

Interesting
 

"~Brian~" wrote in message
om...
Since the weather turned cooler, Ive had an influx of field mice into the
house. They have been munching on the cereals that my wife stores in the
cupboard under the stairs.
Now I have been setting traps for the last two weeks and got Zilch.
Watched
the Grime fighters the other night and saw the pest control guy used
Chocolate Spread to bait his traps, tried it last night, caught 2 of the
little buggers. Apparently Peanut Butter is good as well. :o)


Mouses love fat (especially at this time of year when they're trying to put
weight on for the worst of the winter). Anything with plenty of fat will
catch them. I use bacon rind (when I don't hard fry it till it pops for the
best "pork scratchings" for myself, try it, you'll love it) but as you saw,
chocolate spread, peanut butter, lard, just about anything with lots of
calories in it will work.

Tom



Christina Websell[_2_] 09-12-2009 12:10 AM

Interesting
 

wrote in message
...
Dave Hill wrote:
I go back to basics and just use peanuts


Peanut butter is less likely to roll off, and harder for them to nick
without setting off the trap.


I prefer to use a catch alive trap so they can be released. Why is it
necessary to kill them?

Tina





No Name 09-12-2009 12:29 AM

Interesting
 
Christina Websell wrote:
Peanut butter is less likely to roll off, and harder for them to nick
without setting off the trap.

I prefer to use a catch alive trap so they can be released. Why is it
necessary to kill them?


Normally I wouldn't approve of killing anything, but after 6 years of
mice getting in to the kitchen every year and pooing all over my can
cupboard, I've pretty much resigned myself to it. I've tried putting
them outside (back in the nice warm compost bin) and they just come
back. I'm not going to take them on an hour long walk just to dispose
of them outside of walking distance of a house ...

Charlie Pridham[_2_] 09-12-2009 09:37 AM

Interesting
 
In article ,
says...

wrote in message
...
Dave Hill wrote:
I go back to basics and just use peanuts


Peanut butter is less likely to roll off, and harder for them to nick
without setting off the trap.


I prefer to use a catch alive trap so they can be released. Why is it
necessary to kill them?

Tina





Seems kind hearted but it isn't really, where do you release them? too
close and the are back the same day, to far and its either territory with
no food supply or its taken, either way they starve. especially as by now
they will have established their winter food stashes (mostly from your
cupboards!)
But I can see where you are coming from, they are cute and most of the
year not too much trouble
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea

~Brian~ 09-12-2009 09:47 AM

Interesting
 
Charlie Pridham wrote:
Seems kind hearted but it isn't really, where do you release them? too
close and the are back the same day, to far and its either territory
with no food supply or its taken, either way they starve. especially
as by now they will have established their winter food stashes
(mostly from your cupboards!)
But I can see where you are coming from, they are cute and most of the
year not too much trouble


Releasing them again doesnt seem to be sensible, yes they look cute and
cuddly but the bottom line is *They are vermin* and do spread disease and
such. I wont use a live trap for this reason. Vermin control firms are kept
constantly busy ridding people of these pests, and make a fair living at it.




beccabunga 11-12-2009 07:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rusty Hinge[_2_] (Post 871446)

True, but are fieldmice classed as vermin? (Or are they like weeds, nice
ickle things, but in the wrong place?)

And I'd like to know why the RSPCA are allowed to release sackfuls of
urban foxen into the wild, where they just die due to lack of their
usual prey, the urban dustbin.

--
Rusty

All rodents are vermin.

As to the RSPCA, you tell me why they should be exempt from national laws.

Christina Websell[_2_] 12-12-2009 06:15 PM

Interesting
 

"Charlie Pridham" wrote in message
T...
In article ,
says...

wrote in message
...
Dave Hill wrote:
I go back to basics and just use peanuts

Peanut butter is less likely to roll off, and harder for them to nick
without setting off the trap.


I prefer to use a catch alive trap so they can be released. Why is it
necessary to kill them?

Tina





Seems kind hearted but it isn't really, where do you release them? too
close and the are back the same day, to far and its either territory with
no food supply or its taken, either way they starve. especially as by now
they will have established their winter food stashes (mostly from your
cupboards!)
But I can see where you are coming from, they are cute and most of the
year not too much trouble


I am probably lucky as I have a very big garden. Mice released 150 yds away
didn't come back as they had lots of hawthorn berries to eat and stuff like
that.
A cat has adopted me, so no mice in the house unless suicidal. They used to
get into the special cupboard I kept for my wild bird food, no chance now.

The cat throws me a mouse now and again "did you want this for your tea?"

Tina








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