That just leaves 599....
A few years back I heard a private hunting preserve in Texas had online hunting. They had guns mounted that were remote controlled and people could get online and fire the guns remotely. I don't know how true that is, but coupled with Bob's cannon idea that could be a really neat idea for rat controlGreat idea! Cannons!
Bob
They didn't work for meMoral support? You poison a small mammal with neuro-toxin. It walks with a cane because of a previous war injury. How have we come to this?
Seriously, has anyone tried one of those ultra-sound, electrical rodent repellent gadgets. You plug it in. "You can't hear it, but rodents can!" I've never seen a study of their effectiveness.
Bob
I think you may have just given me a new winter time hobby.It can't be over! For every rat you see, there are 5 you don't. Still plenty of time to build an elaborate anti-rat defense system with all the goodies. Take mine, for instance. Custom built rat bait station with 2" of high strength reinforced concrete backdrop, tastefully illuminated by LED landscape lights and monitored by a wireless infrared camera. Said system alerted me at 10:19 last night that there was activity at the station. This screen capture shows the scene right before I thinned the herd.
Every summer the neighborhood has an invasion of the critters and they get into our houses, attics, garages and do $$$'s of damage. Neighbors having to replace appliances because they will nest in refrigerators and oven, etc. We're constantly having to check and patch entry points along the attic and thresholds.
View attachment 32291
I agree, as a fellow biologist, hunter, and meat eater I don't like killing one of Gods creations, but it's necessary sometimes. Greendragon you are a little more kind than me though. I would feel a moral obligation to take out venomous snakes in areas where they pose a risk to other people and pets in town. I have yet to kill a venomous snake out hunting/hiking though even though there have been many instances where they have been way to close for comfort.As a biologist, I'm all for a balanced ecosystem and, in general, live and let live. I even give a yearly presentation at work on why you should't kill the snakes you find in your yard, even if it's a rattler. I've lost count of the number of orphaned baby squirrels I've helped raise. Yep, I talk big but I'm a softy at heart.
BUT the Norway rat is a non-indigenous species that wrecks havoc on the environment and has caused me too much money over the years... so yeah, it's personal.
That would do itYou just need a bigger catView attachment 32308
When can their glory fade?
O the wild charge they made!
All the world wondered.
Honor the charge they made!
Honor the Light Brigade,
Noble six hundred!
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
That just leaves 599....
Your saw dust collector proves that spontaneous generation is realBravo! Champagne for everyone! (Well, when work picks up). I knew you were persistent- crafty too. Nice set-up, Plantdude. That's incredible damage, but the ingress is unclear. Do the holes show a consistent pattern: how high are they in rel. to a very-bottom-of-wall type? I've schemed-up a cheap, low-tech trap w feather-light but stable trigger, silent, and will mean doom for any peekers. I think it ought to work much better than trad. dead-fall type. Have a sketch program on my computer but alas, not set up. If you want to pm an address, I"ll snail-mail you a sketch (won't send Fuller Brush literature ever). Btw, my air rifle patterned beautifully at close ranges w the lead pellets reversed- the hollow skirt fwd. Otherwise, flat-nose pellets preferred. I have a soft-hearted type of mouse story from a few months ago. Was in my storage unit and decided to pull out some fly tying stuff which I keep in a full-sized poly trash can that I converted to a cyclonic sawdust separator for my woodworking dust collector. Assumed it would be mouse-proof, and to my surprise upon lifting the foam gaskets lid, a mama mouse w two pups (mouslings?) almost half her size were nested in a small cardboard box amidst some of my tools. Thankfully they didn't do any real damage or gnaw into any poly bags at all. Very little poop, practically no damage. The lid has a 4" right-angle pvc fitting, and another 4" hole w/out fitting. The thing is, there's no way they could have scaled the sides, and the trash can was well away from anything overhanging. Near as I can tell, mama mouse made some sort of Herculean leap, got stuck, and gave birth in my tools. Pulled out the contents, cleaned w alcohol, and gently dumped the 3 mice out in the can. They were alert, mobile if not frisky, and apparently in pretty good shape. I walked about a block and rolled them out in a weedy culvert. I hadn't been in that can for months, so good timing apparently. Is a puzzlement.
Ifyougotem.

I was told having mice had one silver lining - you don't have rats (as rats eat mice).I'm surprised a mouse and rat would share the same hole.
I usually see mice show up right before sundown at the chicken feeder, then rats a little latter, then more mice, then more rats... They seem to semi get along if there is space and plenty of food. I haven't braved the mosquitoes to watch the chicken feeder at sundown since we have been catching them, but I'm sure there still are some out there. Something stole the bait out of my live catch trap in the backyard last night.I was told having mice had one silver lining - you don't have rats (as rats eat mice).
Maybe he was moving in and ninja rat clan has moved on.
I doubt it.
I think it shows yet more signs of the advancing rodent intelligence. They have made an alliance. This is, perhaps, the beginning of the end, for us.
In the next millennia, rodent history will be taught about how the uprising started in Arkansas...
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