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oldwheels

Legendary Member
Location
Isle of Mull
I've never had this problem before in all the years I've been living here.

Poison is out as you can well imagine - not just for my cats, but my neighbours' various cats, plus the ferals in two nearby colonies who I know hunt in my wood. Not only that, it's the other wildlife as well.

Cage traps are probably the only answer really. I think the local agricultural engineering place sells them. I daren't use spring traps in the house, because one big enough for a rat will smash a cat's leg.

Irritatingly, the culprit (and it is only one) is / has been coming in through a roof space that is enclosed, which means I can't put traps up there without knocking a hole in a wall or in the ceiling. Although the last couple of nights (since I blocked the hole by the drainpipe), the girls have been a lot more relaxed when they're in the hallway in the evening. They will let me know if there's a problem.
A spring trap could be put inside a bit of pipe too small for a cat but big enough for a rat. I have used to have a cage trap but not had any recent problems so I sold it.
In any case rats are a local authority problem here if they are in a residential area but not in commercial property.
 
A spring trap could be put inside a bit of pipe too small for a cat but big enough for a rat. I have used to have a cage trap but not had any recent problems so I sold it.
In any case rats are a local authority problem here if they are in a residential area but not in commercial property.

Now there's a thought... Could pop to the local builders' merchant and get a length of drainpipe. That would work, I reckon.

If I lived in town, the same would apply here I do believe, but as I'm out in the middle of farmland... I wouldn't be surprised if the farmer whose sheds back out onto my wood is up to his eyeballs with them.
 

LeetleGreyCells

Un rouleur infatigable
 
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