Ahh decking ! The Ideal harbourage of all things Rodent !budd wrote:trap now set using tuna as bait, hopefully we'll soon see a dead Rat!!!
Good luck with the trapping Budd.
Keep us posted.
Ahh decking ! The Ideal harbourage of all things Rodent !budd wrote:trap now set using tuna as bait, hopefully we'll soon see a dead Rat!!!
budd wrote:trap now set using tuna as bait, hopefully we'll soon see a dead Rat!!!
so it seems, you don't realise by putting down decking having bird and rabbit food in the garage plus ribbit bedding and newspapers etc is providing the perfect habitat for rats and mice.MacV2 wrote: Ahh decking ! The Ideal harbourage of all things Rodent !
LOL maybe, thing I am going to have watch is the cat trying to get the tuna off the trap if that trap goes off the cat may end up decapitated, it's more like a bear trap than rat trap it's got a proper spring on it !!! I chose tuna because it's a bit smelly and I thought it would appeal to the average rat, at the time I didn't think about the cat going after the tuna, I may have to reconsider the bait.AMCQ46 wrote:budd wrote:trap now set using tuna as bait, hopefully we'll soon see a dead Rat!!!
I thought the cat liked Tuna.......so if you feed the tuna to the rat the cat might get interested?
Put the trap somewhere where the cat cant get at it, problem solved. (Just a thought but why not put it on the bird table, you know they are going there as that's where they are finding food. Put it up there at night, less chance of trapping a bird...)budd wrote:LOL maybe, thing I am going to have watch is the cat trying to get the tuna off the trap if that trap goes off the cat may end up decapitated, it's more like a bear trap than rat trap it's got a proper spring on it !!! I chose tuna because it's a bit smelly and I thought it would appeal to the average rat, at the time I didn't think about the cat going after the tuna, I may have to reconsider the bait.AMCQ46 wrote:
I thought the cat liked Tuna.......so if you feed the tuna to the rat the cat might get interested?
MacV2 wrote:Put the trap somewhere where the cat cant get at it, problem solved. (Just a thought but why not put it on the bird table, you know they are going there as that's where they are finding food. Put it up there at night, less chance of trapping a bird...)budd wrote:LOL maybe, thing I am going to have watch is the cat trying to get the tuna off the trap if that trap goes off the cat may end up decapitated, it's more like a bear trap than rat trap it's got a proper spring on it !!! I chose tuna because it's a bit smelly and I thought it would appeal to the average rat, at the time I didn't think about the cat going after the tuna, I may have to reconsider the bait.AMCQ46 wrote:
I thought the cat liked Tuna.......so if you feed the tuna to the rat the cat might get interested?
Check your trap every morning !
Don't expect instant results, rats have very poor eye sight & suffer from 'Neophobia' which is a fear of new things in their environment, they may just avoid it for a few days.
As previously recommended try peanut butter that has a nice smell for them to find.
Oh & don't pin your hopes on one trap...The more you put down the more chance you have of catching them.
Smaller birds should be ok as they are not heavy enough to set the trap off...I wouldn't worry a pigeons...Rats with wings the bloody things ! However if they are nicking the bait...budd wrote:MacV2 wrote:
Put the trap somewhere where the cat cant get at it, problem solved. (Just a thought but why not put it on the bird table, you know they are going there as that's where they are finding food. Put it up there at night, less chance of trapping a bird...)
Check your trap every morning !
Don't expect instant results, rats have very poor eye sight & suffer from 'Neophobia' which is a fear of new things in their environment, they may just avoid it for a few days.
As previously recommended try peanut butter that has a nice smell for them to find.
Oh & don't pin your hopes on one trap...The more you put down the more chance you have of catching them.
great minds think a like trap is indeed on the bird table, I am a bit concerned about birds however there wouldn't much left of a sparrow or even a pigeon if one was unfortunate enough to trigger the trap, a chaffinch nearly copped it earlier but so for no casualties and also no sign of any rats since I put the trap out although the kids have been out there rat hunting for it so they’re probably keeping its head down for the moment.
I think I’ll leave the trap on the bird till I go to bed then move it to near where they’ve been emerging from the hole in the decking, otherwise I’m pretty sure it’ll kill some unfortunate bird as they tend to start feeding at dawn and I’m getting up a 6 just to move the bloody trap.
BTW the rats seem very confident they let me get quite close before legging it earlier, if I’d have had an air rifle they would have been easy meat, if I don’t have any success with the traps over the next couple of days I may have to borrow an air rifle, I’ll have to ask around see if anyone as access to one people don’t seem to have them anymore, when I was a kid everybody had one, I used to have lovely .22 back in the day, if I still had it now the rats would be in big trouble!!!
Is it baldrocks...I was as humane as I could be...but I think it left the caretaker traumatised...Pete.L wrote:I hope that's a Halal rat stick Mav![]()
Pete.l
FFF...Pete.L wrote:Mav? Who rote that?
Some ilterate to$$erdoh!
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Not exactly humane & within health & safety protocols...cybercarl wrote:I would have just poured some petrol in the bin and set it alight.![]()
(:-})