I just found out that my neighbor that I share a wall with is moving out because of “the mouse issue.” This is the first I’ve heard about it. I’m pretty sure I don’t have mice. I haven’t found any chewed food packaging or what looks like mouse droppings. I do have a cat but I’m not confident he would know how to kill a mouse. I’ve never seen him chase anything on the floor but I know he will chase flying insects. I also haven’t been presented with any “presents.” Could he really be keeping the mice from my apartment by just his scent?

  • rc__buggy@sh.itjust.works
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    8 days ago

    When the dirty neighbor moves out you’re about to have a “mouse issue”.

    IMO, get ready now and set some old-school wood-and-copper snap traps, I put mine in shoeboxes or disposable tupperware with little mouse holes in the side. This keeps the kitty off the traps. I bait with peanut butter, two traps per box and I bend the sear so it goes off on a hair trigger.

    I am loath to use poison on rodents because I don’t want to make pets, raptors, or owls sick. I settled on Cholecalciferol because it seems safer for other wildlife.

    Good luck and don’t forget, smacking them with a broom works too.

    edit:I like to imagine the two people who downvoted this are soap-dodging militant vegans who are AGHAST I would kill vermin.

    • scytale@lemmy.zip
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      9 days ago

      Poison also means they’ll hide and die somewhere unreachable and will stink up the place.

    • raynethackery@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 days ago

      Thanks for the information. I guess it’s time to get containers for all my food. I already keep bread in the freezer.

    • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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      9 days ago

      I occasionally deal with a mouse or two in my house, and I much prefer these kinds of traps. They’re slightly more expensive, but you don’t need many and they’re reusable so that doesn’t really matter much. The advantages are:

      • Super easy to set, just pull the jaw open by the little handle and it clicks in place. No need to touch the dead mouse, it plops right out into a garbage can.
      • I’ve never had mice successfully steal the bait, the cover forces them to put their heads in exactly the right place for the kill bar to come down on them.
      • This also means that I’ve never seen a mouse fail to get instantly and painlessly killed.

      The best places to put mousetraps are often dark and hard to see, and the bright red kill bar makes it easy to tell at a glance whether it’s triggered.