I suppose living in the country you get used to the idea of the odd mouse coming in so I like to give them a second chanceLive traps? Letting go? It is an unpleasant business but its a death sentence to any vermin caught in my house or garage.



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I suppose living in the country you get used to the idea of the odd mouse coming in so I like to give them a second chanceLive traps? Letting go? It is an unpleasant business but its a death sentence to any vermin caught in my house or garage.
You are a nicer person than I. I rabbit hunted our back pasture 2 Novembers ago and it was almost like the ground was moving there were so many mice. Im sure all the owls, hawks, foxes, bobcats, etc ate good that year!I suppose living in the country you get used to the idea of the odd mouse coming in so I like to give them a second chancewhen they start to bring in their entire extended families, well thats a different matter
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That is so sad and it really was a last resort as I hate to kill anything, and very much aware of the wild life and how it can affect them. I dont even use slug pellets in the summer for that reason or spray insecticides. if the traps had worked it would obviously have been a better situation. After poisoning the last lot I have not seen any droppings or dead rats around so I hope they died in their burrowsI don’t know if any of you ever watch the SWFL eagle cam. Recently one of the baby eaglets died and upon autopsy it was discovered that he had bled to death from ingesting rat poison. Please exhaust all other methods before resorting to poisons.
https://www.winknews.com/2020/02/19...yeK-xAWk6mPsA3sUsjreMvrC57xrVbCNubW7RjrUpHYiY
I have also stopped putting food scraps in the compost heap and no longer leave food out overnight, so far so good and still have a live trap out with a poison bait in but nothing yet apart from a little field mouse which I let go.There is a little confusion here about secondary poisoning. It is true that most rat poisons on the market contain anti-coagulants (e.g., warfarin, bromethalin) which absolutely will cause secondary poisoning. But there are alternatives that act on being metabolized and rendered inert. Terad3 is a cholecalciferol based "poison" that, when digested, results in the calcification of organs and subsequent organ (usually kidney) failure. If any of you take joint supplements, you might recognize the ingredient because it's commonly prescribed for joint and bone health. Once it is digested though, it can't affect scavengers. The only chance is if the rat had some undigested product in its stomach or if the rat was caching the product somewhere and a critter found the cache.
A second point on this, to back what some others have said, is that leaving food out definitely will make your rodenticide less effective simply because the rat is used to eating that food and will likely just keep eating that instead of the rodenticide. So if you use poison, take the food away at night at the very least and make poison the only food option for the rats.
I have a rat issue right now, but it's mainly my compost keeping them around. Time for an overhaul and relocation/reconstruction of the compost for me.