Mice

Yep. I use the Tomcat green granules from Tractor Supply. Gallon bucket serves the tractor, garage and other farm sites. I have fed groundhogs going under the farmhouse but they seem to thrive on it instead of die from it.
 
Yep. I use the Tomcat green granules from Tractor Supply. Gallon bucket serves the tractor, garage and other farm sites. I have fed groundhogs going under the farmhouse but they seem to thrive on it instead of die from it.

I buy J.T. Eaton Bait Blocks.
They are about 1" square green blocks with a hole drilled in the center.
They are peanut butter flavor, and they do seem to work.

A 4 pound plastic pail of the little blocks is $14.44 on ZORO.COM (#65162263) - maybe 50-60 little blocks in a pail?
I just drive some nails thru scrap lumber pieces, and slide one little block over each nail.

Active ingredient is Diphacinone ....whatever that is...

I also buy an 80 packet pail of De-Con ll, and I use about 40 of those each season.
I have a 290 year old house, and while I am in Florida, the mice really enjoy spending the winter in my house.
I try my best to keep them well fed.
 
They've taken good old green D-Con off the market. I ordered a lifetime supply from eBay awhile back. I keep one or two boxes under the hoods of my cars. I've had no chewed wires or shredded fiberglass nests since I started. Did it solve the problem? I don't know but I've had no more evidence of mice. Keep them well fed and they won't eat stuff you care about.

Im not apposed to taking that off the market. Poisoning is a horrible death. Mice or any other animal that may eat the dead poisoned mouse and get secondary poisoning. Family dog cat etc. Or even a owl or hawk.
 
One should always be skeptical of anything EPA ever did and a lot of things the FDA does,... plus whoever outlawed D-con. There MAY have been potential secondary dangers but whatever eats a mouse 'dead due to D-con' is not necessarily in danger #1, and #2 none of us ever saw or heard of an example case. in other words that stuff is far fetched and won't withstand the old farmer's logic test. D-con and most rat poison / mice poison was simply Warfarin, an anti blood clotting chemical. Millions of people have taken it as a Rx drug. It killed mice via them dying of internal bleeding, often in the brain. Now how dangerous was that to other animals and to us ? Not very.
 
Im not apposed to taking that off the market. Poisoning is a horrible death. Mice or any other animal that may eat the dead poisoned mouse and get secondary poisoning. Family dog cat etc. Or even a owl or hawk.
are you rich enough to pay for the damage caused by mice and rats to your fellow Humans though?. if so, then it's good it was taken off the market, but someone HAS to pay for the Damage!..
 
I have used several methods at the same time to see what works. I also leave snakes be unless they are venomous. Ramhik green balls about the size of Trix cereal. They love to carry this stuff to the nest. Old fashioned rat traps. They don't work unless you nail spikes of death around the perimeter of the bait end. The treadle type trap seems to work the best. I just a rat last week the size of a large baked potato. Shocker traps... I've tried two different ones. One was battery and the other also had a 120V power adapter. Mixed results and have even caught a few mice. Bugs and whatever tend to short the high voltage plates out so they fail after awhile. Tin Cat...ehh sort of worked but they seem to avoid it like the plague now.
 
New recipe?
Relish in dead mice?
 

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