Discuss Pest repellers alternative in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

On the odd occasion we get a mouse I just use the traditional type mouse traps with peanut butter as bait but the cheap nasty ones you buy at the supermarket never work very well until you adjust them to a hair trigger by tweaking them with a pair of long nose pliers.
 
This idiot will find and kill any rodents she can get her jaws on.... her favourite hobby seems to be digging for moles.........
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On the odd occasion we get a mouse I just use the traditional type mouse traps with peanut butter as bait but the cheap nasty ones you buy at the supermarket never work very well until you adjust them to a hair trigger by tweaking them with a pair of long nose pliers.

For a long time I resisted innovation where mouse traps were concerned, but now exclusively use the plastic traps which are simply squeezed to reset.

Mice tend to move furtively, so set traps close to any likely points of ingress at right angles to wall/skirting board. You'd be amazed how many are caught while simply 'passing through'.
 
On the odd occasion we get a mouse I just use the traditional type mouse traps with peanut butter
At our work we have a couple of anti-vandal cabins in the arseend of nowhere so rodents are a risk. We got the "advanced mouse trap" as we figured they might not be dumb mice, but so far only one caught.

We do our best to make sure no obvious entry points, but the caught one was in a cabin with a cable coming up through the floor and the covering card had been knocked away. Personally I much prefer traps to poison as a quicker / more humane end to the mouse, and no risk of a bigger animal eating one with the poison inside.
 
Personally I much prefer traps to poison as a quicker / more humane end to the mouse, and no risk of a bigger animal eating one with the poison inside.

I stayed away from poison for a long time for the reasons you state and also the risk of one dying in the home - that's a stink everyone can do without. I finally relented as several outbuildings attached to the house have proven impossible to seal against rodents and in a rural setting it can prove difficult to dissuade mice from entering the only source of heat for some considerable distance.

I've seen years when only one or two are caught, but in other years they can be relentless. There's no logic to it - you'd expect a greater problem in cold winters, but numbers can be high or low in mild or harsh weather. I kind of like the little critters, but can't have them running around a house eating and wrecking as they please.

Oddly enough rats have never been a problem. We had one instance of them putting in an appearance over the years and I didn't hang about in sorting that.
 
Going off on a reverse tangent, my neighbour was moaning about one of the cats in the street (yup, there's loads) having a dump on her front lawn so she bought one of those ultrasonic cat deterrents and spiked it into the lawn. The next day there was a big cat 'richard the third' on the lawn right in front of it :)
 
I bought one of those ultrasonic pest repellers once because the wiring to my decking lights had been chewed through. It drove my eldest lad wild because he could hear it, the freak! Maybe he's a superhero?

You'll find younger people can often hear them. But as you get older your hearing range dips well below the 20kHz ideal limit.

These pest repellers emit ultrasonic frequencies, but also have components at less than 20khz sometimes.

My hearing is shocking once things get above the 10khz area.
 
I did read quite some time ago that certain department stores use a noise generator at a particular frequency to keep hordes of teenage school children out of their stores, don't know if they still do, but would have thought it would be stopped by now.
 
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