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I have a mouse in my attic. I could hear it chewing in my walls of my house. If I put poison or traps up in the attic and the mouse dies, will it start to smell as the mouse decays?

2007-02-22 04:36:44 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Other - Pets

17 answers

Don't use poison. There's a chance that the mouse could die inside one of your walls and you would be smelling it for many weeks! Use a trap. Put it where you can easily check on it every couple days but also where there is evidence of rodent activity. Look for droppings and etc. Place the traps in those areas. Also, find out how the mouse got in. Look for openings that might be large enough for a mouse to get in around the base of your house. If you find any openings, use a can of expandable spray foam to seal it. Since you have a mouse problem, be very careful to not drop any crumbs of food anywhere that a mouse can get at it. Sweep often, take out your trash often, avoid leaving dirty dishes in your sink and keep all cupboards and food pantrys closed. All of those are ways that mice can obtain food. Mice often make their way into a house when the weather is cold and food is scarce. As long as you make food scarce inside as well, then even if you don't catch it in one of your traps, then maybe it will leave when the weather warms up. Good luck!!

2007-02-22 05:00:42 · answer #1 · answered by Carrie 3 · 0 0

Yes if it dies it will smell and it will be a horrible as it will rot unless you can find it and dispose of it.

I found a product that put in both my garage and laundry area, it's called mouse movers. You can buy it at The Sharper Image. Since I put those up I no longer have any mice or rats in my garage and I don't get mice in my laundry area.

I live near a canyon and so mice and rats come up from the canyon often, yes it sucks. My laundry area is out on my patio, so it's a little more exposed being where it is.

They guarantee this product to work and it does, I'm really happy that I bought them as they are doing the job. I don't have to deal with chemicals or traps and I love that, that's another bonus. There is a pet friendly setting on it if you have cats/dog, but for some reason the mice can not stand it.

You need to have an electrical outlet to plug it into and it needs to be hung on the wall about two feet from the floor. I would never be without one again.

I hope this helps you to solve your problem. Good luck.

2007-02-22 04:50:27 · answer #2 · answered by Cindy 6 · 0 0

If you do have a cat you should not put poison down as if the mouse eats the poison then the cat eats the mouse,you will lose your poor kitty as well as the mouse.But you cat get a mouse trap box so the mouse goes inside the box and gets stuck and dies inside the box.Then you can just dump the mouse in the garbage.

2007-02-22 04:50:42 · answer #3 · answered by smurfcrazie 2 · 0 0

Yes, mice smell as they decay. A friend of mine had one die behind her wall (I believe she used poison), and the smell was awful for weeks. Chances are that the mouse will eventually come into the main part of your house in search of food, so put some traps in your kitchen or anywhere you see evidence of mice (droppings or chewed food containers, etc.). I've had great success with this live trap in my house:

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

It’s also available for $2 cheaper here (although I prefer to buy it from the other place since I’m not a big fan of PETA):

https://www.petacatalog.org/prodinfo.asp?number=HP200

I've caught over a dozen 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. When you release the mice, do it in an area with some sheltering bushes or plants.

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.

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

2007-02-24 01:53:46 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

actually there is a poison called d- con people that literally turns the mouse to dust and it does not smell when it dies. i used to live next to a grain elevator and the mice are terrible there an di used d-con and never smelled a single one and there were dozens. i did eventually get cats though!! and they work a lot better. but you have to keep up with vet checks because mice carry things they can pass on to your cat and kill them!! get rid of that mouse one way or another because every day it is there you risk it chewing through wires and causing a fire in your home. best of luck!!

2007-02-23 18:38:33 · answer #5 · answered by heather l 4 · 0 0

Yeah and usually if you have 1 mouse you have a whole bunch of mice. Set out traps and catch them they can be the traps where the mouse goes in and cant get out then you take the container outside and set it free or they can be the type of traps where they are killed it doesn't matter but once you catch the one mouse set it up again and i can almost guarantee that you will catch more. Good luck.

2007-02-22 04:42:57 · answer #6 · answered by neth_dwarf2004 2 · 0 0

they are there for the two food or guard. discover out how they are stepping into and get rid of the outlet. verify all over the living house for openings, cracks, gaps interior the beginning, siding etc. Fill the holes with concrete or steel wool (the two project that mice can not chew by). Then get rid of the food. keep all your food in tight packing containers. rubbish too. in case you think of like a mouse then even crumbs from the toaster are a food furnish. this stands out as the toughest area considering skill food factors are everywhere. additionally, try peanut butter in an previous kind mouse catch -it works enormously solid. be careful approximately ailments that they convey. examine up on hantavirus on a well-being branch internet internet site. solid luck.

2017-01-03 08:34:47 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Very much so. Try putting a humane trap in your attic. Once you have caught the mouse, take it by a river and let it go.

2007-02-22 05:50:49 · answer #8 · answered by Veneta T 5 · 0 1

I would think that if it was a mouse, you wouldn't be able to hear it chewing. Could be something bigger - like a chipmunk, squirrel, etc. I'd look to see if I could find out where the critter is getting in and seal it off. If you can't do it yourself, I'd get a pro out to do it. Usually where there is one critter there are multiples.

2007-02-22 05:51:00 · answer #9 · answered by BLONDAGE 2 · 0 0

Yes...i would suggest you try glue traps. they are a bit cruel but they work like a hot damn. The only thing is you will have to check them once in awhile and if you do find one stuck on the trap, throw it out(gloves please)
If it is still alive i would recomend you either release it (baby oil will get it off the glue) or drown it in a bucket of water.
I know it is mean to do, but rather it die now than suffer on a glue trap.

2007-02-22 04:42:37 · answer #10 · answered by terri2003anne 3 · 0 0

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