Quote:
Did it have a hairy tail ?
That would be a packrat, common in Eastern WA & OR, have not seen many on the wet side.
Ours here are black, and have short noses & big round ears.
They want no part of any bait we have tried lately, including peanut butter or the chocolate frosting we had luck with last year.
We are going to try veggies next, our rats must be a herbivore type.
DH wants to try frozen peas....
The Audubon Field Guide to North American Mammals says that packrats/woodrats exist in Western Washington, and the habitat says North Bend is a possibility.
Weirdly enough they're talking about rats on the radio right now.
I have failed to do nothing today: I got a phone call from somebody who got our number from a computer-fixing friend. The call itself and the succeeding conversation got me REALLY paranoid about my wallet, so I called to see if a theoretical honest person might have turned my wallet in to the cops and now I'm waiting for an officer to call back and take a stolen property report.
I am not having a good day.
I just looked up photos of rats, and yes, I now think both were packrats / bushy tailed wood rats. For some reason I was expecting, with a name like that, for the tail to be squirrel like. My rats both had short faces that don't look anything like the Norway rat, so I guess they must be wood rats. Roof rats can'thave white bellies. (the rat zapper rat didn't, but the cat rat did). Cat rat looked exactly like the one here: http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=bushy+tailed+wood+rat&view=detail&id=99BFAE7FFB9B5CADC38AA445F57CDCD9EB3FC653&first=0&qpvt=bushy+tailed+wood+rat&FORM=IDFRIR
The one in the rat zapper looked more like this:
http://blog.elizabethenslin.com/wp-content/uploads/DSC_2044.jpg
Not sure if those worked.
Did it have a hairy tail ?
That would be a packrat, common in Eastern WA & OR, have not seen many on the wet side.
Ours here are black, and have short noses & big round ears.
They want no part of any bait we have tried lately, including peanut butter or the chocolate frosting we had luck with last year.
We are going to try veggies next, our rats must be a herbivore type.
DH wants to try frozen peas....

The Audubon Field Guide to North American Mammals says that packrats/woodrats exist in Western Washington, and the habitat says North Bend is a possibility.
Weirdly enough they're talking about rats on the radio right now.
I have failed to do nothing today: I got a phone call from somebody who got our number from a computer-fixing friend. The call itself and the succeeding conversation got me REALLY paranoid about my wallet, so I called to see if a theoretical honest person might have turned my wallet in to the cops and now I'm waiting for an officer to call back and take a stolen property report.
I am not having a good day.
I just looked up photos of rats, and yes, I now think both were packrats / bushy tailed wood rats. For some reason I was expecting, with a name like that, for the tail to be squirrel like. My rats both had short faces that don't look anything like the Norway rat, so I guess they must be wood rats. Roof rats can'thave white bellies. (the rat zapper rat didn't, but the cat rat did). Cat rat looked exactly like the one here: http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=bushy+tailed+wood+rat&view=detail&id=99BFAE7FFB9B5CADC38AA445F57CDCD9EB3FC653&first=0&qpvt=bushy+tailed+wood+rat&FORM=IDFRIR
The one in the rat zapper looked more like this:
http://blog.elizabethenslin.com/wp-content/uploads/DSC_2044.jpg
Not sure if those worked.