literally exactly what I was going to type.Trash pandas are smart.
literally exactly what I was going to type.Trash pandas are smart.
Hey, I intended to answer this earlier, sorry. Due to the design of our house there is no way for me to get into the part of the attic they have made their home. I've put some bate in an adjoining part of the attic thinking they might have a way to squeeze into it, but no dice... they didn't touch it. Everything is set up for tonight. Trap set, cookies with honey out, game cam set. Now, if the possum has enough smarts not to try again maybe I'll get lucky and catch a coon.Why not set the trap in the attic?
Just wondering. Good luck. I hope you trap the little boogers.Hey, I intended to answer this earlier, sorry. Due to the design of our house there is no way for me to get into the part of the attic they have made their home. I've put some bate in an adjoining part of the attic thinking they might have a way to squeeze into it, but no dice... they didn't touch it. Everything is set up for tonight. Trap set, cookies with honey out, game cam set. Now, if the possum has enough smarts not to try again maybe I'll get lucky and catch a coon.
My money is on the racoon eating the honey, then carrying the trap down off the roof and putting it by your back door.Let's see if you can lick the honey off without springing the trap this time.
I would think squirrels would be out of the attic during the day and this time of year there shouldn't be any little ones in the nest. If you locate where they're getting in and block it you might solve the problem. If any is still inside you should hear them and you could try again.I have trapped 3 possums, two ground hogs, but no racoons. Racoons are hard as hell to catch. They are easier to just shoot with a high powered pellet gun. So are ground hogs. My problem with trapping ground hogs is that i drive them for an hour out to the WMA, and in a few days the SOBs are back. So, I just shoot the SOBs.
Local law enforcement suggested the pellet gun, because you can fire then within city limits. Mine set me back just a measly $150, and one of the best investments I've made in pest control. Cages, baits, etc... cost me way more.
I currently have squirrels in my attic. I have used large rat traps to some success, but just killing 3 or 4 hasn't cleared them out entirely. I still hear them bouncing off the walls all night long.
My problem is that they come in through the basement, and then work their way up through the walls. I have asked a few guys for quotes on blocking the entirety of the house up with wire, but they all come, do some math, and then leave without giving me an estimate. It may just be cheaper to have the basement finished off, but then we would have a giant room with only five feet of headspace, ha ha.I would think squirrels would be out of the attic during the day and this time of year there shouldn't be any little ones in the nest. If you locate where they're getting in and block it you might solve the problem. If any is still inside you should hear them and you could try again.
Living one block from the PD, I do not agree that these are as quiet as a BB gun, ha ha. Or a pellet gun. Just chambering a round will have the blue and reds in front of my house in seconds, ha ha.
I took 7(!) baby skunks off our property this past summer and I live right in the middle of a medium sized city. It took about two weeks and three long drives. Our neighbour discovered they were so easy to trap you could just throw a plastic bin on top of them. All the neighbour kids kept saying how cute they were. My poor puggle got spayed right in his face and in the mouth. His breath smelled like skunk for over a month. The mother is still around the neighbourhood but there currently aren't any skunks on my property. Just a lot of rabbits.It's 11:08 pm. About a hour ago we were in the family room and I heard a sharp noise out on the patio. I turned on the lights, grabbed my flashlight and went outside. I noticed the trap had sprung so I went around to the side to see what was inside. There, staring back at me were two little black eyes in a black and white stripped face. A skunk! I moved fast to put some distance between us. Now the problem of getting him our without getting sprayed. After some thought I got an old plastic drop cloth and covered most of the trap with it, then using a pole with a hook on the end I lifted the door and away he ran. He was small and probably young. Fortunately he did not spray.
I took the trail cam inside and viewed the videos. I was surprised not to see the skunk but instead the racoon casually eating my cookies one after another, and to my amazement he went completely inside the trap, ate more cookie, turned around and left without tripping it! Amazing, That's some crafty coon. After that there was s short clip of a neighbor's cat paying a visit then the skunk.
Ok, coon, you want to play hard ball. Tomorrow I'm putting the trap in a new local where the possums and skunks can't get to it, The trap will be on the roof of the patio near where you get in the attic. And I think I'll put a nice gob of honey right in the center of the pressure plate. Let's see if you can lick the honey off without springing the trap this time. Stay tuned for the next exciting chapter....
Wow, impressed to hear that this was a solution at that distance! Thankfully I don’t have to worry about that! These cuties just sleep on rocks at our houseLiving one block from the PD, I do not agree that these are as quiet as a BB gun, ha ha. Or a pellet gun. Just chambering a round will have the blue and reds in front of my house in seconds, ha ha.
My high powered pellet gun, merely sounds like I opened a carbonated beverage.
For suburbia... this may be a better option. I've dropped ground hogs from more than 200 feet. But sure, further out into the country, I'd opt for a real rifle.
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Marshmallow, yes.Jumbo marshmallows have always worked well for me as raccoon bait. Put a couple outside the trap and one at the back. Cover the back 1/3 of the trap with bricks or something heavy so they can’t reach in from outside. Weigh the trap down with a cinder block on top. The problem with tuna is you end up catching cats IME.
I’ve had the bast**ds roll the trap over from the outside to make the bait accessible from outside. I’ve seen them learn not to step on the trigger plate and reach over it so I extended the plate with some sheet metal. Lube the mechanism so it works better.
My neighbor would trap them and release them close enough that they’d return and be that much smarter about traps. Thanks.
Can you tell I hate those bastards? Living next to a large woods means lots of them around. They can do what they want but when they start causing problems...
This has been one of my favorite threads. Good luck."He Tasks Me. He Tasks Me, And I Shall Have Him!"
Update: Last night the trap was set again with a gob or honey on the pressure plate. This morning I want outside and found the trap had not been sprung. What I did find was the honey was untouched, and about 3" away from the honey, right inside the trap, somebody had taken a dump! Wish I had set the game cam up so I knew what it was. This whole thing is starting for remind me of an Elmer Fudd cartoon... and I'm Elmer. It ain't over yet.