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Rats in Compost

Started by barkingdog, January 20, 2008, 12:14:20

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Robert_Brenchley

I gave up on those; mouse traps eventually got dragged out of sight attached to various portions of rat anatomy, and rat traps never caught anything. I might try the weight-activated traps rather then the baited ones.

Robert_Brenchley


dtw

My compost heap is in my garden and I don't have any rats, as my cats catch them all.  :D

The trouble is, they bring them indoors for me. Luckily they kill them first.

Columbus

Quote
mouse traps eventually got dragged out of sight attached to various portions of rat anatomy[/quote]

I tie my traps to metal pegs or other immoveable object.

Col
... I am warmed by winter sun and by the light in your eyes.
I am refreshed by the rain and the dew
And by thoughts of you...

davee52uk

I found that having a snake in my compost heap really sorted out the mice and rat problem - bit extreme but an adder decided to live there!

denis trundle

These soon get rid of they pesty critters


no more rats;D ;)

big J

Quote from: denis trundle on March 13, 2008, 08:48:37
These soon get rid of they pesty critters


no more rats;D ;)
nice ferrets and dogs what cross are your dogs if you dont mind me asking thanks

denis trundle

Hi Big j, the dog on the left is a collie x lurcher and the other is lurcher x lurcher ;)

Paul Dee

Quote from: Robert_Brenchley on February 17, 2008, 13:33:28
I gave up on those; mouse traps eventually got dragged out of sight attached to various portions of rat anatomy, and rat traps never caught anything. I might try the weight-activated traps rather then the baited ones.

I got rat traps from a professional exterminator fellow, its about 5x the size of a mouse trap, but the same design and certainly works. Main problem is if a mouse sets it off you have 2 halves of a mouse to dispose of.  :o

davyw1

Quote from: Robert_Brenchley on February 17, 2008, 13:33:28
I gave up on those; mouse traps eventually got dragged out of sight attached to various portions of rat anatomy, and rat traps never caught anything. I might try the weight-activated traps rather then the baited ones.

The best trap for rabbits and rats are Fen Traps , they cost about £8.00 but they last a life time and do the job.
When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

Robert_Brenchley

Thanks for reminding me; I've been trying to remember what they were called. I spotted some for a fiver on eBay.

Dear Devon

Try adding lime to your compost bin.  It doesn't affect the compost but rats hate it and will look to move house.

MrBean

Quote from: steveuk on February 16, 2008, 21:31:10
I am afraid i use rat poison, as the little beggers are also nesting in the horse manure pile under the carpets, as i covered them to stop them getting to sodden lol

Quote from: Dear Devon
Try adding lime to your compost bin.  It doesn't affect the compost but rats hate it and will look to move house.

Lime will affect the composting process as it will kill the fungi which breakdown the contents.

moonbells

I suspect I too have rats in my dalek bin as I have a huge tunnel in the compost (couple of inches diameter) and I saw something duck down it one day. Sadly it's behind the shed at home, and the shed base is raised enough for a rat to nest happily under the floor, so I think I'm going to have to push bait into the gaps and hope they stop popping into the bin for lunch. I just threw green potatoes into the hole till it filled up, meanwhile.

moonbells

Diary of my Chilterns lottie (NEW LOCATION!): http://www.moonbells.com/allotment/allotment.html

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