MovieChat Forums > General Discussion > Wild House Mice

Wild House Mice


A few questions:

1. If I were to capture a mouse alive without little harm to it as possible, what would be the best kind of trap to use?

2. If captured, would it be okay to sell it to someone else as a pet or companion (or have someone adopt it)?

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We have a soccer field behind our house and we get field mice every fall about 2 to 4. I use the old fashioned method. I don't think they would make good pets.

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You're cruel.😢

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What am I supposed to do with them ??

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Just let them do their own thing!🐁

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I can send them to you and they can infest your house.

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Maybe they can nibble on my grapefruits.

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May be if you put peanut butter on your grapefruits.

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I was thinking of whipped cream with a cherry on top, but peanut butter sounds good.👍

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You are making grapefruit sound better and better.

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So how about a little taste next Friday?

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They're a pest that can do a lot of damage. A snap trap is the quickest, most humane way to get rid of them. Don't use stick traps, they are cruel as hell.

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Hmm...I guess I have no choice....

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I hate killing things too, but you should see my parents house. They had to rip out the entire basements insulation because the mice were making nests and crapping in it. Besides being the heath issue, it was not cheap.

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Dang....

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They can be pretty tasty. Showing the proper gusto at the dinner table can also help mitigate an infestation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gKMBk3js7e0

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Ewww!

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Relax, I kid! Good movie though:

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086005/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

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Hmm...guess I'll check it out! That scene reminds me of the "Chewbacca eating porg" scene in The Last Jedi....

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Serious answer for the mice: release 'em back into the wild, away from anybody's house. If you're going to do this on a regular basis, use a few different locations and vary your routine, otherwise something that eats mice may notice and always be there for a hand-out.

I've seen this with Red-Tailed Hawks when someone was releasing squirrels near work.

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That seems like a good idea. That's a very interesting observation about the predators as well.

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I haven't "caught" any mice this Fall. I guess they have all gone to the neighbors.

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Get a cat or terrier, and delegate the decision-making process.

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I had a Rat Terrier who ran inside and went in my room and would not come when I called her. I found her in the corner hiding and I saw a tail coming out her mouth and I pulled it and out came a dead squirrel. She was trying to swallow it whole. Lol

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When I was a kid, the stray cat we took in marched through the garden door during a ladies' afternoon tea, carrying a dead roof rat in her mouth.

Oh, the screaming! It was hilarious!

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A roof rat sounds big!

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And the cat was small, and made it look even bigger!

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That time of year to go on mice alert.

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I started early this year since the weather had been very cool
6 glue traps in all the usual spots for over a month now and nothing...
Hoping this is a trend🤞

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I use the old trap ones with peanut butter. They can't resist the peanut butter.

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It's the best bait for them and it sticks perfectly to that little yellow trigger pad
I went with glue traps several
years ago after finding too many traps eaten bare of bait and the little stinkers got away...I don't know how they do it!

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No mice again this year. I can put the traps away.

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Apparently your actions encouraged them to move on.

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two years in a row with no mice.

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I had a mouse in my house only once. Ick. I have no idea where he came from, but I put out sticky traps and he was dispatched. I don't count the time that one of my dogs caught one and brought it inside with her. I thought it was dead, but it wasn't. Once she had dropped it in the middle of the kitchen floor and I saw it move, I slapped a bowl or something over it. I walked around that thing for two days before I had the courage to lift it. By then it had expired. Whew.

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I'm no expert, but I imagine that an adult wild mouse would not make a good pet.

A baby wild mouse (that is lost or abandoned) can make a wonderful pet, but it is a lot of work, knowledge, and patience to hand-raise them.

It's a dilemma for some, as they can be very cute but also can be uninvited, unwelcome pests. I would hope that if it is necessary to get rid of mice that it is done in a humane manner.

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