12-22-2016, 04:05 PM
[MENTION=24108]Doc[/MENTION], if you do a search on t-rex mini trap, you will find a lot of places that sell them. Pest control is a year-round job on a farm.
Here in the Southwest the mice are very dangerous because they carry Hanta virus that can kill even healthy adults. University researchers studied the mice in the next village over from mine and found that 60% of the field mice had the virus. I know one person who died and another who had to be in an induced coma for two weeks in intensive care at the hospital but she made a full recovery.
Sealing up every tiny entrance to your home is the best bet. Mice can get through a hole the size of a dime. They can jump out of a five gallon bucket and can climb walls to access attics.
On the farm we use barn cats, live traps, snap traps, and bait stations (with vitamin D bait so there's no secondary poisoning risk for other wildlife.) Live traps are for the food handling areas but then we still kill 'em. We keep habitat for snakes and raptors.
We have a mating pair of ravens living in the forest nearby that we have trained to come feed on this one rock. So when we empty the traps the ravens enjoy an easy meal. Biggest raven's I've ever seen they are so well fed!
Rural living has its pluses and minuses. Being rural and gay and new to the area is not the easiest combination. People are generally suspicious of outsiders and practically no one is out of the closet. The beauty and peace and quiet is unmatched. So lots of trade offs to consider.
Here in the Southwest the mice are very dangerous because they carry Hanta virus that can kill even healthy adults. University researchers studied the mice in the next village over from mine and found that 60% of the field mice had the virus. I know one person who died and another who had to be in an induced coma for two weeks in intensive care at the hospital but she made a full recovery.
Sealing up every tiny entrance to your home is the best bet. Mice can get through a hole the size of a dime. They can jump out of a five gallon bucket and can climb walls to access attics.
On the farm we use barn cats, live traps, snap traps, and bait stations (with vitamin D bait so there's no secondary poisoning risk for other wildlife.) Live traps are for the food handling areas but then we still kill 'em. We keep habitat for snakes and raptors.
We have a mating pair of ravens living in the forest nearby that we have trained to come feed on this one rock. So when we empty the traps the ravens enjoy an easy meal. Biggest raven's I've ever seen they are so well fed!
Rural living has its pluses and minuses. Being rural and gay and new to the area is not the easiest combination. People are generally suspicious of outsiders and practically no one is out of the closet. The beauty and peace and quiet is unmatched. So lots of trade offs to consider.