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Humanely Removing Wild Rats from Your Home
http://www.ratfanclub.org/wildrats.html
Removing Wild Rats from Your Home
by Debbie "The Rat Lady"
Ducommun
The best way to
keep rats off your property is to remove any access to food or
shelter. Rats are
attracted to pet food and bird seed as well as garbage. Garbage and food should be
stored in metal or heavy duty plastic containers. You need to seal any access
to your house, even very small holes as young rats and mice can
squeeze through any opening they can fit their head
through.
Please do not use poison or glue traps which are
inhumane.
Using a
Live-Trap
If you want to
remove wild rats from your home without harming them, you can use a
live trap. Live traps
are usually available from humane societies and feed stores. The best thing is to put the
trap out and fix it so the door won't close at first so the rats
will get used to eating out of it. The best bait is peanut
butter put directly on the treadle. Once you know rats are
eating the bait, you can set the trap. Doing it this way insures
that the rat doesn't accidently set the trap off before he goes
in. If that happens, he
would never go in the trap again.
Now, the tricky
part is where to release him.
You can't just let rats go in forest or field. They must have source of
water, and around water they will be able to find things to eat such
as insects, worms, snails, fish, frogs, etc. So the best place to release
them is at a permanent source of water such as a creek, river, lake
or pond.
In most parts of
the country, the common wild rats are
Norway rats (Rattus
norvegicus), also called brown, sewer or barn rats. In warmer climates the roof
rat (Rattus rattus), also called the black rat or tree rat, can be
found and is often the most common wild rat in these areas. Roof rats must be released
in an area where there is water and trees.
A Rat
Repellant
A woman in the Army stationed in
Baghdad, Iraq emailed me with information about a rat
repellant that really worked in her case. She
wrote:
"A small company makes a totally
harmless rat repellant called Fresh Cab. I wrote to them and
they sent a big case to us for free. The product comes in
little sachets (like potpourri) that smell like pine boughs (I think
they have other scents too). You put the sachets in problems
areas and - no more rats!! They WORK!! The smell
actually keeps rats away. This is the ONLY non-kill/non-trap
product I could find anywhere and it DOES work. We're talking
about rodents out in the middle of the desert here too - our meals
are DEFINITELY easier for them to get than anything
else."
The company
is:
Crane
Creek
Gardens
Earth-Kind,
Inc.
17
Third Ave
SE
Stanley,
ND
58784
Customer
Service:
1-800-583-2921
701-628-1310
Fax:
701-628-1320
info@cranecreekgardens.com (info
(at) cranecreekgardens.com )
Another company called Critter-Repellent.com makes a rat
repellent from bobcat and fox odors. Their website is at: http://www.critter-repellent.com/rat/rat-problems.php
Peppermint Oil
Soak cotton balls in peppermint oil and place many
cotton balls in the area where the rodents frequent. The
peppermint smell will sting the rodents' noses and make them leave
the area. Seal all holes where rodents are coming in from the
outside.
Birth
Control
If you don't mind having some wild rats on your property, but
want to prevent the birth of too many, you can try this old-time
remedy for birth control that was reported to work for wild rats by
one person. Mix the
herbs pennyroyal and asafeotida with split peas. Unfortunately she did not
tell me amounts so try equal amounts of each. Then mix it all with
peanut butter to make a thick "cookie dough." The woman who told me this
many years ago reported that the numbers of wild rats dwindled
slowly as the rats died off and did not reproduce.
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