Quote:
Guys like visuals. I suggest after catching your first, stick it in a plastic bag and put it in the freezer until it is solid. Drop it on the seat of his car without the bag about half an hour before he needs the car. He'll get the idea pretty quick.
When we first moved here, we had a very serious field mouse problem. It was terrible. I bought those little glue mouse traps and caught some, but someone had to either kill them or listen to them suffer. And these ended up bbeing expensive because every time I caught one, had to use another one. When Home Depot ran out, I grabbed the big rat ones. This was like a horror movie gone bad, at one time, counted 8 of them stuck on one.
Since I garden organically, it didn't make any sense to use poisons and take a chance of little ones or pets getting hold of them, or them dieing where I couldn't remove their carcasses.
Then I found out that rats and mice don't hang around together. If a rat claims space as it's, they will seek out and consider the mice free food.
So we had rats. They need sources of water and did fun things with the plumbing. They were stealth like, never leaving tell tale signs that they were there like mice. A friend of mine who's a real estate agent always uses the Vicxtor electronic ones once a house is empty after showing a very expensive house and finding a rat floating in the master bath toilet. Most of my neighbors bought them too. What's really nice about these is that first you get the adults, those seeking to get food for the younger ones, then the juveniles, and because the ones nesting have nothing, it breaks the cycle. A year ago, you couldn't drive down the street at night without seeing one run across the road. Not now. And, down the street, there is a large church with a day school. A friend of mine works there. They started using them, and have had no sightings, no bodies in about 9 months.