English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If there even is such a thing...

2007-01-08 16:13:04 · 9 answers · asked by fashion girl 10301 1 in Home & Garden Other - Home & Garden

9 answers

Here are instructions to build your own humane (live catch) mouse trap using an ordinary 2-liter pop bottle and piece of plywood. There are no moving parts, thus no danger of harm to the mouse... just be sure to check the trap daily when in use, and set the mouse free when caught.

Follow steps 1 - 15 and don't forget to read the instructions about how to use it, which is crucial to the trap working properly.
http://www.humanemousetrap.info/step1.htm

Happy mousing...

2007-01-08 16:26:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I had a problem with mice last summer. I started off using the old fashioned method---it helped. But not much. I then tried the sticky pads. They work very well... But show no mercy.... Then we went to using a more humane method---using a trap that lures them inside and they can't get out. This company made the one I used: . We purchased the Multiple Catch Trap, catches 4-5 at a time and sells for about $4. After that, to keep from allowing the problem to start again.... I did put out the poison for any future visitors. And yes, they do carry diseases.... like the hanta virus, etc.... So please be careful. If you let them go....do so away from your home & your neighbors..... BTW, I kept a count and there were a total of 15 by the time we had the problem under control. 15!! So they do multiply rapidly!

2007-01-08 19:30:42 · answer #2 · answered by Brenda 6 · 0 0

you may get humane traps at homestead Depot or Lowes and at some community grocery shops. they are between $5 & $10 yet you need to use them constantly. in simple terms positioned some peanut butter or some variety of nutrition that has a stable scent and then launch the little men into the woods. I had a foul mouse undertaking and this worked for a at the same time as yet they are exceptionally clever and started to avert it. you would be able to need a pair distinctive varieties to avert this undertaking. I hate to assert it however the main precious way of taking away our mice replaced into bringing homestead a kitty. I hate to work out a critter die yet I felt like it replaced into way better than putting down inhumane traps myself and on each occasion we caught her with one we could launch it formerly being injured too badly. i've got not seen mice interior the homestead ever back.

2016-10-30 09:53:45 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I've had great success with this humane trap in my house:

http://veganstore.com/index.html?stocknumber=266

I've caught over ten mice with it so far and it can be used over and over indefinitely. Or, you can try making the free homemade humane trap described here:

http://www.helpinganimals.com/wildlife_livingWithMice.asp

If you do live trap mice, please be sure to check the traps several times a day and release the mice promptly, approximately a mile away from your home. It is much more cruel to allow a mouse in a live trap to slowly starve to death than to kill it quickly with a snap trap. Also, if you use the live traps outside, put some bedding (torn-up paper towels or cotton balls) inside the trap so the mice won't freeze to death during the night. When you release the mice, do it in an area with some sheltering bushes or plants. If you are a kind person, you might also leave a little bird seed or oatmeal for them.

The absolute cruelest traps are glue traps. Mice have been known to gnaw off their own limbs and tear off their skin in an effort to escape, as they starve or dehydrate to death or suffocate in the glue. It can take three to five days for them to die. Poison isn't any better, as the mice die slowly and painfully from internal bleeding. It can take up to a week for them to die, and then they smell as they rot behind your walls.

It doesn't take much extra effort to be kind. You will feel better and so will the mice! Good luck!

2007-01-09 01:37:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I don't have a trade name, but I have used a cage like trap with a spring loaded door attached to a baited trip. The mouse will be unharmed when caught and can be release outside, preferably away from your property.

Best bait in the world is peanut butter, the aroma will drive them into the open despite the dangers.

2007-01-08 16:21:47 · answer #5 · answered by MT C 6 · 1 0

The kind that snaps and kills them instantly.

I tried one of those glue traps...then you have a live mouse stuck to the glue and you can't pull em off, so you have to kill them some how. Stepping on them is not a good idea as the trap will ge stuck to your shoe not to mention the popping sound as the mouse dies. kill 'em quick is best. I finally got rid of mine by filling the place they lived with CO2 (Dry Ice) they just fell asleep and never woke up, but you have to be able to seal the area they live in perfectly. So it not always an option. The mice I had outsmarted the sanp traps so I had to bring it up a notch!

2007-01-08 16:23:10 · answer #6 · answered by knujefp 4 · 1 1

the cube...you bait it and they go in but can not go back out...then you can release them in a field.....far away from your home. Once I caught 3 in the same trap at once. I no longer have any of the little critters, took about a week to round them up and relocate them.

2007-01-08 16:17:33 · answer #7 · answered by catywhumpass 5 · 1 0

even more humane than the cube: catching it yourself. then you get to set it free on your own and not scare it by locking it in a cage. all those disease carrying rats are glad to have someone like you around ;)

2007-01-08 16:20:41 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

maybe tack paper & relocation

2007-01-08 16:19:08 · answer #9 · answered by wind cries mary 3 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers