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the sound of small feet in the attic

(107 Posts)
kjmpde Tue 23-Mar-21 21:22:05

we think we have mice or something else in the loft. That happened over 12 months ago and we used tea tree oil in little pots and the smell seemed to work . we had nothing for months BUT now the new eucalyptus oil is not working . tried menthol crystals but again nothing works. The last resort is poison and it is a last resort so the question is a) has anything else worked in removing mice (the plug in does not work) and b) if you have used poison what is the best one? thanks

BlueBelle Wed 24-Mar-21 09:37:47

I can’t believe what I m reading with all of you who like putting poison down without a second thought no I m not ‘soppy’ baggs what right have you to kill an animal they are no lesser a creature than you are and have a right to live
A rat is equally intelligent to a dog why is one cosseted and the other poisoned
Block up holes or whatever way they are getting in thats what I did when I found a rat nibbling a wooden skirting board in my house I looked and looked until I found a possible entrance the tumble dryer hole blocked that up and never seen a rat since
He didn’t know he was in the wrong place doing the wrong thing he didn’t do it on purpose unlike humans who murder and rape and kill on purpose
My word I m surprised

maytime2 Wed 24-Mar-21 09:41:29

How do you know that the problem is caused by mice and not by rats? My neighbour had this problem and it was caused by rats coming up the sewerage pipe and into the attic.
Some local authorities do provide a service whereby they put down the poison and do the necessary checks. This can save you up to £200.
Sadly my authority no longer provides such a service, but does have a list of professionals that you can refer to.

Witzend Wed 24-Mar-21 09:48:11

I was expecting a ghost story, too!

henetha Wed 24-Mar-21 09:53:25

I simply can't bring myself to kill them. Mice, I am talking about, as they are a bit of a problem here in the country.
So I do use humane traps and then take them for a long walk.
But recently I read that they hate the smell of peppermint so I bought some peppermint rodent spray, and a bottle of peppermint oil which I scatter around. There have been no mice since.

Alexa Wed 24-Mar-21 10:06:25

Is it possible to import another animal that will prey on the mice? Can you buy an efficient hunting cat who can have access to the attic at all or most times?

henetha Wed 24-Mar-21 10:08:50

I fully intend to get a cat (I love them anyway) after Miss Wiggy (my cockatiel) goes to that great bird house in the sky.

Alexa Wed 24-Mar-21 10:15:05

I can tell you are a person who likes to plan ahead, Henetha. Good for you!

henetha Wed 24-Mar-21 10:18:31

Well, I'm 83, and cockatiels have a long life span... so grin

Awesomegranny Wed 24-Mar-21 10:33:02

Rats or have you got a freaky horror film doll in the attic?

Alexa Wed 24-Mar-21 10:36:44

I am 89, Henetha, and I still plan ahead although I do remind myself it is not worth my while doing certain projects such as growing an oak tree for a privacy screen.

Best wishes to your cockatiel and your future cat whether she materialises or not.

jaylucy Wed 24-Mar-21 10:41:59

Some plug ins have to be in the actual room that is affected and only cover a certain area of your house that often (as I found) doesn't cover the loft. Spend more and make sure that it covers your whole house area.
I have had to resort to the old style spring traps in the past, a lot of the so called humane traps are great but you have to make sure you release the vermin a long way away or they can find their way back!
You need to do something or they get under the floorboards, with sometimes drastic results - we had a problem with our upstairs lighting setting off the trip switch- a mouse had got under the floorboards on the landing and chewed through the wiring!
If all else fails, call in a pest control company and leave it up to them

Juicylucy Wed 24-Mar-21 10:42:24

I had exactly the same last September tried all the recommendations nothing worked. In the end I had to get pest control in, the guy said he had to use poison because they were running up and down cavities in the walls and by now there were to many to use humane traps, he did use poison, I didn’t want to resort to that, but because I’d tried other stuff that was recommended that didn’t work they had multiplied by time I called them out. It was £100 for 3 visits lay poison then 2 follow up visits to make sure it had worked. Good luck.

Gwenisgreat1 Wed 24-Mar-21 10:43:04

We used humane mouse traps borrowed from our DD. We caught 2 mice which DH refused to believe where there!

timetogo2016 Wed 24-Mar-21 10:43:15

There are blocks you can buy from Amazon that work well.
Also if you use traps,mice love snickers bars,we caught loads within a few days.
They have all gone thank goodness.
Also they don`t like the smell of human hair whitch i now push into air -vents.

TwinLolly Wed 24-Mar-21 10:55:21

I've used a v shaped humane trap. Put peanut butter at one end. Mouse walks into tunnel, up slope to peanut butter, tunnel tilts so mouse walks on the flat. New upward part ~ trapdoor closes. So mouse can seesaw but can't get out. We trapped many mice that way and relocated them. I have heard of cat pee working too.... Mice smell tje enemy and stay away. Ask someone for a bit of old cat litter...

Coco51 Wed 24-Mar-21 10:59:03

I used plug in deterrents after capturing and releasing a couple of mice in woods away from home (they didn’t find their way back). We weren’t troubled again.

orly Wed 24-Mar-21 11:10:27

It could be other things like birds and squirrels as Spring arrived. We have both birds and a squirrel pecking and gnawing away at the newly installed soffits and fascia to get under the tiles in one section of roofline on our bungalow with further evidence of twigs and moss all over the area below. My husband deterred them early on by placing lots of brushes in the gutter and has ordered a 4 metre long "gutter hedgehog" to replace the brushes which make the neighbours think we are home to a witches coven!

Lauren59 Wed 24-Mar-21 11:14:02

Please don’t use poison. If you put it inside, the rodents may still die outside and then be eaten by another animal. It’s a slow, painful death. There are humane traps, please use them.

Moggycuddler Wed 24-Mar-21 11:25:47

Before you use poison get Pest Control to make sure it is mice or rats and not birds, or possibly squirrels. You may also need access points identified and blocked up.

Baggs Wed 24-Mar-21 11:29:39

I understand when people say they can't bring themselves to kill mice.

I also understand when people say the mouse doesn't know it's doing anything wrong. This is exactly right (except when it's Jerry from the cartoon) but one can't reason with it either and get it not to chew your house up.

I presume the people who talk about a house mouse's right to live (give me field mice anytime for preference) do not eat meat or fish. Although, I read a really interesting article by someone who had lived as a vegan for years, but changed back to being omnivorous. One of the things she stressed is that all food causes death of other creatures. Yes, ALL, because when you plough or otherwise disturb soil to grow non-animal crops you kill thousands and thousands of animals, the tiny ones that live in the soil. The argument that they have as much of a right to live as you do then kind of falls apart.

As lucky says, nature is not fair. Life survives on the premise of Eat or be Eaten. Putting your humanely killed (splat trapped) house mice out for birds of prey or corvids to eat is repsecting nature as well as saving your electrical wiring etc.

HannahLoisLuke Wed 24-Mar-21 11:35:34

I use cotton pads soaked in peppermint oil in my shed and a plug in for the garage. Both seem to be working.

4allweknow Wed 24-Mar-21 11:36:06

Are you sure it is mice and not squirrels? Humane traps for both. Have your roof checked as there are obviously gaps alloying the vermin access to your loft.

olliebeak Wed 24-Mar-21 11:49:03

We live about a quarter of a mile from a Safari Park, so were very happy to discover that the 'footsteps in the loft-space' only turned out to be a Grey Squirrel. We managed to evict him/her, but were just grateful that that was ALL it turned out to be, as the last creature to escape from there turned out to be a very frightened Baboon shock!

Kartush Wed 24-Mar-21 11:51:56

We used to have rats in our roof, then a carpet snake moved in and ate the rats, she was a much more pleasant lodger.
Now in our new house we have a possum, not as quiet as a snake but doesnt do any harm. Not sure if I would welcome lots of mice though, they can do alot of damage. Pity you dont have carpet snakes in the UK

Pussycat2012 Wed 24-Mar-21 11:56:32

Peanut butter in a humane mousetrap works every time. Pe
aunt butter tip from iron monger whose a farmers son.