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Oh Rats!



jakarta

Well-known member
May 25, 2007
15,738
Sullington
Yes we have them.... :eek:

Advice from any NSC Pest Control Type persons welcome.

I saw one in our Garage, which is connected to our house, a couple of weeks ago & it made itself scarce ASAP but I wasn't happy with this situation so bought an electronic Rat Zapper and the day before yesterday caught a decent sized rat. Yesterday it zapped an even bigger one (hanging out of the trap this morning).

Have we got an infestation and if so why - there is no food in the garage (well a few tinnies and bottles of wine but I'm sure Mr Rat can't smell them).
I don't mind co-existing with the occasional Mouse but Rats are a No-No - any (sensible) advice welcome.....
 




Monkey Man

Your support is not that great
Jan 30, 2005
3,224
Neither here nor there
Got exactly the same problem. I've had all kinds of advice and done a lot of reading ... it seems this is isn't something that can generally be dealt with quickly.

Rats tend to venture into houses at this time of year and one in 20 homes has an infestation, whether the owners realise it or not.

Poison is what the council generally recommends and can be effective but you can end up with smelly, decomposing rodents in your walls and under floors.

The best solution is to identify entry points and seal them off. We've got an extension built on a suspended wooden frame and it's paradise for rats. I've sealed off obvious entry points with scrunched-up chicken wire or metal plates and blasted the area with Jeyes Fluid to stop the rodents navigating by smell (they use their own urine as a guide). That's been a good first step but we're now creating concrete trenches impregnated with shards of glass as another barrier. We've also taken up our beloved decking.

I put down traps but the council said it was a bad idea as they can attract new rats to the area. All I know is that none of them caught anything.

Basically there is almost nothing you can do to prevent rats visiting your garden and investigating your home as a potential refuge, even if you have no food or waste for them. Their range is half a kilometre so all they need is one or two decent food sources from your neighbours. Just look around for any hole larger than a 50p piece and consider it an invitation to rats. Then seal it with something like mesh/glass/concrete and give it a good spray. And stay vigilant.

If I'm sounding like a smug know-all, bear in mind I haven't yet conquered my own rat problem. But I think I'm winning.
 


lawros left foot

Glory hunting since 1969
NSC Patron
Jun 11, 2011
14,078
Worthing
To paraphrase Jasper Carrot. "Only one way to deal with a rat, blow its bloody head off"
 


GoldWithFalmer

Seaweed! Seaweed!
Apr 24, 2011
12,687
SouthCoast
Jack russell or my cat..
 


nwgull

Well-known member
Jul 25, 2003
14,533
Manchester
Open wheelie bins attract rats like anything - even only slightly ajar.

As suggested above, a good way of discouraging them is the old fashioned method: a cat.
 




Monkey Man

Your support is not that great
Jan 30, 2005
3,224
Neither here nor there
Open wheelie bins attract rats like anything - even only slightly ajar.

As suggested above, a good way of discouraging them is the old fashioned method: a cat.

Here in Lewes District food waste is supposed to go into rat/fox-proof plastic bins and ours has never been breached. I've also been reading some words of wisdom from an American pest controller ... he admits that cats can be a deterrent but adds that almost every infestation he's asked to deal with has been in homes where there is a domestic cat. If rats are really established, cats just can't keep up with the rate of breeding. Neither can poison.

Rats are incredibly successful and adaptable animals, as I'm finding to my cost.
 


jakarta

Well-known member
May 25, 2007
15,738
Sullington
Hey Ho,

Mrs Jakarta wants us to get a dog in New Year, I have a feeling it is going to be a Terrier of some sort!
 


GoldWithFalmer

Seaweed! Seaweed!
Apr 24, 2011
12,687
SouthCoast
More cats,the Northstand pied piper,pour concreate down all orrifices,glue traps,flamethrowers,inject the queen rat with a genetically diseased disorder,failing that move?
 






sully

Dunscouting
Jul 7, 2003
7,938
Worthing
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Our cats have been catching loads recently!

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Official Old Man

Uckfield Seagull
Aug 27, 2011
9,106
Brighton
Had rats in an old building. Got an 'expert' in @£150 and he put down some poison. Told me to fill in all holes that we found. Certainly worked. But be aware were you put poison because of other animals.
 




AlastairWatts

Active member
Nov 1, 2009
500
High Wycombe
Amazon sell an electronic rat trap which runs off two torch batteries and is baited with peanut butter, then zaps 'em with 80,000 volts. I caught seven in two days with one of these and since then no more. Humane, clean and all you gotta do is tip the dead rat into the wheelie bin. Positioned ours against a wall and have had no problems since then....
 




smeariestbat

New member
May 5, 2012
1,731
my parents had rats at their farm, i went up there to visit and spent two weeks shooting the buggers! they now have a cat :)
 




surrey jim

Not in Surrey
Aug 2, 2005
18,162
Bevendean
We never had rats until we got a cat. We now regularly awake to find dead rats on the kitchen floor, and a proud cat sat next to their present purring smugly.
 


Foul Play Rocks

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 23, 2013
5,181
A visit from pest control should sort it out quickly although £150 (see post 11) seems a tad excessive but maybe that was two visits or a very, very large house.
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
We never had rats until we got a cat. We now regularly awake to find dead rats on the kitchen floor, and a proud cat sat next to their present purring smugly.

My stupid cat brought a live mouse into the kitchen, which escaped behind the units. We had to use a trap to kill the mouse, as our cat couldn't get at it. Useless!
 






Grapes of Wrath

Active member
Nov 1, 2009
353
Worthing
A few years ago I saw a rat in my garden eating bird food, so I grabbed my air rifle and shot it. It seemed a strange colour and I thought no more about it until there was a knock on the door, and there was a little girl there with her Mum asking whether I had seen her pet rat which had escaped from a house out the back of me. I didn't like to mention that it was in my dustbin.
 


Lady Whistledown

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
47,634
My stupid cat brought a live mouse into the kitchen, which escaped behind the units. We had to use a trap to kill the mouse, as our cat couldn't get at it. Useless!

Ours did the same back in the day.

Said mouse legged it up inside the boiler, which the cat proceeded to guard, intently, for a week or so. Needless to say, the mouse opted not to come out, what with there being a fat, hungry feline sitting right next to it, so simply died instead, and being positioned snugly inside a nice warm boiler, rapidly began to smell fairly rancid.

I remember the folks calling the gas man out, who, after taking the boiler apart, concluded that he still couldn't get to the mouse, and that the only way to remove the smell was to use plenty of air fresheners and wait for it to be completely toasted, to nothing but ashes.

That took weeks, I have to report. It's surprising just how grim one small, burning mouse can smell.

Bloody cat never gave up hope that the mouse would come out eventually, you know. For months, he kept going back to the boiler & having a good look & a sniff, just in case :lol:
 


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