Winter Storage

   / Winter Storage #11  
I've had problems with mice this year in my house and even in my car. A recent article in a local newspaper gave me some comfort in that I'm not alone. Many people are having problems with mice, due in part to a lack of acorns in our area.
A couple scary fact the article pointed out: Mice can have 10 babies every three weeks, and can begin breeding at age 35 days. Extrapolate that out and it seems nearly impossible to win.
I know this doesn't help with your problem, but you're not alone.
 
   / Winter Storage #12  
Best trap I've had in the garage was a drain pan with coolant, put it under the back of my project car where the dogs couldn't get to it, week later there were 4 mice floating in it.

Works with a bucket and peanut butter suspended.
I haven't found anything that deters them well enough yet.
 
   / Winter Storage #13  
While on the subject, what is the purpose for a mouse to begin with? Other than destruction.

Ronnie
 
   / Winter Storage
  • Thread Starter
#14  
Back to the tarp idea / "wrap" the tractor....I have some heavy (almost 0.100") thick rubber (in sheet form) that I could "wrap" my tractor. Throw bait under the tractor to kill anything that might get in. It'd be easy to see if something chewed through it. And it was free....

I can't really suspend this one off the ground, it is an F3990 and tips the scales at over 2,500lbs.
 
   / Winter Storage #15  
The problem I've had with baits is that it encourages them to store it. They think they found the ultimate food source, and they chew into all sorts of areas to stuff them full of poison bait without eating any. Sort of creates more damage than preventing it. Along those lines, make sure there is NO food in the building for them. No corn, chicken feed, dog or cat food, birdseed, indian corn decorations brought in after fall, etc. Any food like that must be stored in metal cans with tight lids. They will chew threw plastic trash cans to get it.
I have used peppermint oil and whole cloves, and that does seem to work. But I also keep traps within a foot of both sides of every building door, an inch from the wall. That really works well to keep every new immigrant squashed. But that only works in buildings you will be in at least a couple times a week so you can check and bait the traps. For a 'set and forget' option the 5 gallon bucket trap (ramp, bottle on wire and baited with PB) will catch most of them too. Some days I catch several in my traps, some days none. Sometimes its weeks with no catches and then I catch 6 in a week. Keep the PB fresh and its an easy routine to keep them under control. I have had damage to several vehicles in the past, but since I started the routine I listed above I have had zero damage. I keep this up year round.
 
   / Winter Storage
  • Thread Starter
#16  
I use the large "chunks" or cubes, which I haven't seen moved before, due to the weight. I just toss out fresh ones every month or so. But I have to keep the dogs out of the barn so they don't pick one up.

- I just have the small field mice, so they are pretty small. The bait cubes are larger than the mice.
 
   / Winter Storage #17  
In my RV I have tried dryer sheets, and mothballs on cheap paper plates, dryer sheets no work for me, mothballs do work. But I think a few female cats would be the ticket. My neighbor next to me operates a dairy farm and he always has what I call barn cats around, gives them fresh cow milk and dry food so they hang around and sleep in barn around hay bails. Of course they still venture outside around the fence rows looking for more food and the fox, coy dogs along with the coyotes take there toll. But hands down the right cat is the ultimate mouse killer.
DevilDog
 
   / Winter Storage #18  
The ultimate mouse killer is a weasel. I am hoping one shows up in the shop again. They came in ones or twos every winter until I got a shop cat. The cats kill the weasels. Mice are no challenge for a cat. They get bored catching mice. They like birds and weasels more.

Although, as stated "the right cat" is good. Not all cats work at catching mice.
 
   / Winter Storage #19  
Back to the tarp idea / "wrap" the tractor....I have some heavy (almost 0.100") thick rubber (in sheet form) that I could "wrap" my tractor. Throw bait under the tractor to kill anything that might get in. It'd be easy to see if something chewed through it. And it was free....

I can't really suspend this one off the ground, it is an F3990 and tips the scales at over 2,500lbs.

That's not really much weight.

Set it on blocks. Slippery metal ones or even well greased wooden ones. Mice will not travel over grease.

Jack it up. Block it. Put it back down.
 

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