Gransnet forums

Chat

That could have been nasty!!!

(23 Posts)
BigBertha1 Thu 10-Oct-24 10:46:18

OMG Cats and Mice - nightmare!

Baggs Thu 10-Oct-24 10:34:57

kitty 😂

🐭

kittylester Thu 10-Oct-24 10:14:55

If a mouse had run out from under the cooker while i was cooking, baggs, there is absolutely no saying where the splodge could have ended up. grin

Baggs Thu 10-Oct-24 09:57:37

Love that, GrannySomerset!

My actual first thought on reading the OP was that any mouse worth its salt would surely have spotted the descending hot splodge in its peripheral vision and dodged the splodge.

GrannySomerset Thu 10-Oct-24 09:53:18

Our cats moved with us from town to country and discovered the joy of catching mice. The trouble was they would bring them in alive, interview them under the kitchen table and then lose interest. The most efficient way to catch them proved to be wellington boots laid flat - once inside the mice seemed quite happy and could be taken outside to live to fight another day. It did mean that I never put on a wellie without shaking it thoroughly just in case.

Allira Thu 10-Oct-24 09:45:59

Cats' looks can be deceptive, Truddles, my grandchildren's sweet, pretty little cat is a murderer too, not just mice.

Truddles Thu 10-Oct-24 09:41:01

I saw a mouse run across my landing while the house was undergoing some building work. I hate mice and the next day went to the RSPCA and picked up two beautiful sister cats. I had meant to get a big ugly bruiser of a cat, but I fell in love with my two film star girls. As it happens, they are absolutely amazing little murderers as well, and I never get invasions of little fuzzy f***ers as the smell of cats is a deterrent.

Baggs Wed 09-Oct-24 18:29:19

Newer traditional traps made by a very well known pest control company are very efficient and humane. Much easier to set than the older versions too.

Growing0ldDisgracefully Wed 09-Oct-24 17:04:08

The traditional traps aren't humane - we used them for an influx of small visitors one year and one victim was not despatched quickly. It was partially caught, and screamed in dreadful pain until my husband killed it. We resorted to humane traps but despite using peanut butter, and chocolate spread, the mice weren't convinced!

Harmonypuss Wed 09-Oct-24 16:17:52

I live across the road from industrial units, so we get the nasty, big, furry, long tailed, scary things around here, but my spaniel has become quite accomplished at catching and killing them.
Only last week, I came home from shopping to find one in the middle of my kitchen floor, thankfully, departed from this world. I grabbed the dustpan, scooped it up and deposited it in the wheelie bin, then came indoors and gave my saviour a nice tasty treat.

Baggs Wed 09-Oct-24 16:09:41

Allira

Applegran

I have used humane mouse traps in the past and driven several miles away to release them in the countryside. I don't think they came back!

We've done that but were told they don't survive so it's in fact kinder to use the ordinary traps.

What Allira says is true. Mice are territorial and will kill unknown incomers.

Also - and it's amazing how few people seem to know this - "ordinary" mouse traps are humane. Humane doesn't mean something isn't killed; it means they are killed instantly and painlessly.

So "ordinary" mouse traps are humane whereas putting a mouse outside its own territory to be ripped up by other mice is not.

Allira Wed 09-Oct-24 15:50:25

Applegran

I have used humane mouse traps in the past and driven several miles away to release them in the countryside. I don't think they came back!

We've done that but were told they don't survive so it's in fact kinder to use the ordinary traps.

Applegran Wed 09-Oct-24 15:45:44

I have used humane mouse traps in the past and driven several miles away to release them in the countryside. I don't think they came back!

grandtanteJE65 Wed 09-Oct-24 13:24:38

NutRocker

A humane trap & some peanut butter will soon lure it out. Then you can set it free……

Unless you are prepared to drive about 10 km from your home with the said mouse in the humane trap before setting it free, it will just come back in.

SheepyIzzy Wed 09-Oct-24 11:57:59

Back in the late 80's when our house was hooked up to mains gas, mum bought a gas cooker, we also had a fabulous cat called Smoky! He was a proper killer! However, a few weeks after having the cooker, Smoky decided to bring a live mouse into the house, something he'd never done before, always left remains usually.

Well, he brought this bloody mouse in whilst we were cooking ..... And let it go!

It shot straight under the cooker!

Neither we nor Smoky ever saw it again. There was a slight smell for abit and the cat spent quite a while lying in front of the cooker waiting patiently!

......

NutRocker Wed 09-Oct-24 11:49:16

A humane trap & some peanut butter will soon lure it out. Then you can set it free……

kittylester Tue 08-Oct-24 20:00:30

I would refuse to cook again.

Allira Tue 08-Oct-24 19:53:42

kittylester

Youngest cat had brought it in overnight and it had hidden there. Eeeeek!!

At least it was a mouse and not something larger!

kittylester Tue 08-Oct-24 19:33:45

Youngest cat had brought it in overnight and it had hidden there. Eeeeek!!

Allira Tue 08-Oct-24 17:36:16

😁

sodapop Tue 08-Oct-24 17:29:53

My two dogs and the cat sit and watch if a mouse is running round Allira they think its just another pet. smile

Allira Tue 08-Oct-24 16:55:18

🤔 the mouse could have met his demise though, under a sea of hot sauce.

What is the matter with your cats? They're not very good mousers! 🐀🐈

kittylester Tue 08-Oct-24 16:42:34

Having spent the afternoon batch cooking, I though I must have dropped a tasty morsel of sausage (creamy sausage pasta sauce) on the floor as one of the cats spent an awful lot of time sniffing round the floor by the cooker.

I am so pleased that the tiny mouse lurking under there didn't pop out while I was holding a pan of hot sauce.