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Humane mouse trap

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    Humane mouse trap

    I have been embarrassed to mention that we discovered that my mum had mice in the house.She was unaware and we kept it from her, but it was a bit odd sleeping in her living room those two nights knowing it!
    When changing her bedding we had seen droppings under the mattress.
    Before mum went into the home and on one of the few days we managed to get her out of bed and into the living room, OH tackled the bedroom.
    Mum had a habit of waking in the night and taking snacks to bed. We knew this as she often told us. What we didn't know as I never had cause to go into the bedroom, was that crumbs etc littered the sides and beneath the bed, and she didn't take the crisps and biscuit wrappers away, or clean in there. So weeks of debris had accumulated . Under the other single bed which had been my dads, OH found the nest, with many many wrappers etc. No mice, but in the living room I had found a packet of biscuits chewed open and nibbled and a Mars Bar. Lots of dropping too so we thought there must be a mouse or mice about still.

    Once mum was in the care home OH borrowed a mousetrap, and set it, and I hoped no mouse would be caught. Sadly, although I did not see it, one was.
    I couldn't bear to think of any more dying, so we looked into ordering a humane one online.
    OH being OH, decided she could probably make one. With instructions from Your Tube, a plastic lemonade bottle, pen, bottle tops and a couple of other things, she did.
    She put it down at mums, with peanut butter as bait which is apparently irresistible.

    Today we went to mums and success, a sweet little mouse was in there!
    He/she looked a bit greasy from peanut butter oil but nor worse apart from that. We drove away (as we have heard they come back in if you release them in the same garden) and let it go in the countryside.
    OH has washed the bottle out and we will have to do it again.

    My family are impressed especially DD3. They had a mouse in the apartment in Canada and bought several humane traps, and didn't catch a single mouse.



    “A grandchild fills a space in your heart that you never knew was empty.” – Unknown

    #2
    Awww they are so sweet but you really can't have them in the house can you . Thing is they can get in the tiniest of gaps even in the cleanest of houses Gem . Crumbs lying around are like 4* restaurant to them . So muc better using Human traps and releasing them away from where you catch them though xx
    Im not fat just 6ft too small

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      #3
      I hate the ruddy things. Hubby would use a humane mouse trap.
      Sometimes I forget to like posts,but that doesn't mean I don't like them.

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        #4
        Those mice were having a field day Gemini, I think there must be several, good luck. How did they manage to squeeze under the mattress.
        What is life if full of care we have no time to stand and stare

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          #5
          We used to keep the dry dog good in the garage and I would scoop some out by hand which was fine until I scooped up a little field mouse! Sadly it was dead.
          Believe you can and you're halfway there.
          Theodore Roosevelt.

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            #6
            I’m very impressed that OH made her own humane mousetrap Gem!
            Women are like tea bags; you never know how strong they are until they are put in hot water.
            Eleanor Roosevelt.

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              #7
              I live on the 5th floor of an apartment block, a few years ago we had soooooooo many mice, unbelievable, the council got a man in to find the source and get rid of them all, it turned out my neighbour on the corner had them in her house and treated them as pets!!!!! They moved her out of the house for a few months and completely renovated it, the mice had even eaten through walls etc.!!! Luckily we haven't see any since.

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                #8
                Thank you Grauntie, so am I

                Lizzie, cute as they are they can't be kept as pets (unless in cages) can they? They can cause so much damage let alone the hygiene aspect!
                “A grandchild fills a space in your heart that you never knew was empty.” – Unknown

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                  #9
                  We had a lot of wood mice living in some stone walls, they were coming in from the woods. Then when my DD and family got a cat they disappeared. There present cat is a hunter, I hate to see cat playing with creatures he brings in from the woods, we try and get them off him but he just runs away. Your cat looks too comfortable sleeping Oma to be a hunter.
                  What is life if full of care we have no time to stand and stare

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                    #10
                    Gem - well done to S for creating a humane trap.

                    When we extended our kitchen we started getting mice in one particular cupboard - it was where we kept cereals, biscuits, crisps etc - definitely a Michelin Starred menu for mice. I don't like killing them either, and I don't mind them in the garden, so we moved all the food out of that cupboard and put plates, bowls, measuring jugs and stuff like that in that cupboard. Nothing remotely edible, and the mice disappeared. We put the food stuff in a cupboard on a different wall, and they've never got in there.

                    Perhaps when the mice in your mum's realise the food source has dried up they'll move out and look for better lodgings.

                    "Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "

                    (Marianne Williamson)

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                      #11
                      The same happened to us WeeG. Not the dead mouse bit tho. OH kept the sack of dried dog food & a sack of bird food in the garage. We live next to farmland so it was bound to attract the field mice eventually. Now he keeps the sacks in IKEA bins with lids on.

                      Someone once told me that a mouse never poops without a wee. Lizzie, the mouse problem sounds horrendous.
                      "Good friends help you to find important things when you have lost them....your smile, your hope, and your courage."

                      (Doe Zantamata.)

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by Plantaholic View Post
                        We had a lot of wood mice living in some stone walls, they were coming in from the woods. Then when my DD and family got a cat they disappeared. There present cat is a hunter, I hate to see cat playing with creatures he brings in from the woods, we try and get them off him but he just runs away. Your cat looks too comfortable sleeping Oma to be a hunter.
                        Plant - DS1 was telling me last night that he'd noticed what looked like a dead leaf in their hall yesterday morning - they're always blowing in. Obviously the rest of the family, including the dog, had passed the same dead leaf. Around lunch time he decided to pick it up and bin it - and realised it wasn't a dead leaf. It was mouse entrails! So he cleared it up, disinfected etc, then started to wonder about the rest of the mouse. The dog wasn't a suspect because he's too fussy to eat a dead furry thing. Eventually he went into the utility room and noticed the cat's bowl was empty - somebody had forgotten to feed her. As soon as he picked up her food she appeared as if by magic, mewing furiously, and clearly saying "if you forget to feed me you can expect more of the same!"

                        "Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "

                        (Marianne Williamson)

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                          #13
                          In this area we have a problem with Glis Glis, Years ago my GD1 opened a cupboard and reached out a packet of rice cakes, one was sitting in the packet. It was released into the wood but came back again so, we are not allowed to kill them so had to get a registered person to come and bait a box in our loft. Non were caught. They are very pretty but an absolute pest if they get in the loft.
                          What is life if full of care we have no time to stand and stare

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                            #14
                            I have never heard of those Plant.
                            “A grandchild fills a space in your heart that you never knew was empty.” – Unknown

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                              #15
                              Neither have I. Can you tell us what they are please Plant?
                              "Good friends help you to find important things when you have lost them....your smile, your hope, and your courage."

                              (Doe Zantamata.)

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