Danny2580 wrote: » The area is a bit cluttered, I'd assume clearing it out is the right thing to do first? Thanks!
Danny2580 wrote: » Thanks guys. Just from reading previous posts on here the consensus was that traps are most effective Stigura. What do you reckon is the best path forward? Cheers for taking the time to reply.
Bobbins wrote: » I think poison not recommended indoors as if rat dies the smell is apparently horrendous if you can't locate it to dispose of. Putting poison outside doesn't pose that problem, obviously make sure it's safe if you have kids. We have a rat in our attic at the moment, even typing the word rat makes me shudder. It's entry point was alluding us til yesterday so praying we catch the thing now. It has avoided taking any bait, cheese peanut butter, you name we've tried it. I saw on a post on boards from years ago that 50/50 antifreeze and water works well as highly toxic. We put that down last night so just waiting on husband to go and check now! Good luck!
peasant wrote: » The best rat trap IMO is this one: Quick, humane, highly effective, long lasting. Placed in the right spot it'll get them all Not cheap thoughhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHdTJ8XaPzM
Pasteur. wrote: » Ya.seen them before have you tried it Aren't they mad.dear
peasant wrote: » Yes, I own one and yes they are expensive. I put mine on a home made stand that I can move around and have used it in several locations and cleared those of rats (compost heap, greenhouse, a rat run that somehow led to my attic) Used to have a rat problem for years ..not anymore. Why I think they are worth the money: - They are set and forget. You may have to remove the odd dead rat now and then (if other wildlife doesn't take care of that for you) but that's it. As long as the trap has gas left, it will work. - They kill quickly and cleanly. No maiming, no trapping of limbs, no prolonged agony. -They are safe for other animals (cats, dogs, birds) - not poisonous The bait that comes with the trap does work, in some locations other bait works better though. we had rats congregating around the bird feeder. The supplied bait got one or two ... modified the bait to birdseed and got a lot more. Have had mine now for three (or four?) years, always outside, still works flawlessly. Which reminds me ...need to find a source for CO2 cartridges locally...buying them form Goodnature is stupidly expensive. Don't mind paying for the trap, but a CO2 catridge should be cheap
peasant wrote: » Which reminds me ...need to find a source for CO2 cartridges locally...buying them from Goodnature is stupidly expensive. Don't mind paying for the trap, but a CO2 cartridge should be cheap
Pasteur. wrote: » I liked the idea when I saw them How many rats have you killed with it?
Pasteur. wrote: » Melted chocolate onto a trap Drives them wild Antifreeze.is.deadly if any pets get it
whisky_galore wrote: » Poison is destructive to other wildlife, such a last century method. Can't believe people haven't moved on from this.
Calahonda52 wrote: » Not as destructive as homo sapiens
Danny2580 wrote: » Have had plenty of success in the past catching mice by using a piece of a chomp bar mixed in with cotton woll (pulling it off earbuds will suffice) and using it as bait. They tend to pull at the cotton to try and remove the toffee and chocolate from it, often setting the trap in the process. Has worked very well for me. Tried it with the first set of rat traps I put down last night and caught one. Will report back, thanks for all the replies so far.
gozunda wrote: » Its the huge fecker at 2:02 who drags the dead rat under the adjacent gap :eek: Btw what kills the rats in that device? Edit. A word to those with a problem with rats etc. Stay away from poison bait if ye can. Poisoned rodents will get eaten by wildlife and pets. Rats & mivlce can also cache bait away from the baited area and into sheds and houses. They can also contaminate hay and feed with the poison they cache.
John_Rambo wrote: » We're beside two parks, one is 290 acres with a river 50 metres away. We've never had rats in the house, but we have them wondering over to the gardens all the time, we feed birds too. This looks like an excellent solution.