I like this a lot. There are definitely two owls in the area around my house as I can hear them calling back and forth sometimes. I think they need a place on my property and any bonus of them eating my rodents would be great. I'm definitely going to look up plans for an owl house or two and make them!Owl houses on the property. They jeep voles, mice and squirrels to an acceptable level. It's fascinating to watch them zero in on a rodent under the snow with those oddly placed ears, dive and arise with dinner.
I live in town, I have a very powerful air rifle!If you want fun, get a 410.
Just watch any small dogs?Owl houses on the property. They jeep voles, mice and squirrels to an acceptable level. It's fascinating to watch them zero in on a rodent under the snow with those oddly placed ears, dive and arise with dinner.
I hope C&D's marketing department has someone watching this thread!Put out a few tins of Haunted Bookshop. That shit will kill anything!
Or at least chase them away.Put out a few tins of Haunted Bookshop. That shit will kill anything!
Already tried that, sadly didn't work. Kenny G showed up to my house with his soprano sax painted black. That was a one-star Yelp review if there ever was one!I hired a guy in a multi-colored suit who plays the oboe.
And, I made sure to pay him up-front.
I use pieces of steel wool to seal small cracks like you are dealing with. I had a few small cracks where plumbing enters my home and mice would squeeze their way in. I took steel wool and shoved it in all around the plumbing pipes using an old butter knife to shove it in. It seals that entry way and if they do try to eat the steel wool, it will tear up their innards and they die outside your home. I haven't had a mouse issue in over 15 years now.Although my wife and I have done a bang-up job plugging up all the little holes/cracks/spaces on our mountain cabin where mice can get in, one still occasionally slips past the defenses. The weak point is the poorly constructed base of the attached laundry room; I'm fairly certain that the roll of thick mesh screening we plan to pick up at Home Depot next week will put the kibosh on that. All the aforementioned entry points have been sealed. We use caulk for small openings, and that "Great Stuff" expanding foam spray for larger ones. These both work extremely well.
Last week, one got into the wall between the bathroom and the outside laundry room, almost certainly through the laundry room floor. I could hear it move around intermittently, and figured it would likely follow the path of its predecessors--in other words, it would climb up into the attic, and get caught in either of the two mousetraps placed up there. But this did not happen; it just hung out in the walls for no good reason. After about five or six days of this, I decided I'd had enough. We use the Victor brand snap traps with the plastic pedal. They've served us well in the year and a half we've lived at this particular location. A pea-sized blob of peanut butter does the trick. I placed it in the laundry room last night, and in the morning, sure enough, our guest had checked out. Fortunately, without leaving a tip (blood).
What do you use for rodent control? Interested to hear some other stories about this very relatable problem for rural dwelling folk.
Found some really good info on this. Checking on my scrap wood options and then getting this project underway soon!Owl houses on the property. They jeep voles, mice and squirrels to an acceptable level. It's fascinating to watch them zero in on a rodent under the snow with those oddly placed ears, dive and arise with dinner.