Position your tube halfway extended over a table or counter top, someplace elevated the mice can get to. Set a small raisin in front of the tube. Set ...
Congratulations! Hopefully you will have demonstrated your superior intellect and caught a mouse. Now you get to exercise your capability for compassi...
Catch those furry critters with this simple mousetrap.
This will definitely catch mice but will likely result in broken mouse legs. I have seen mice break their legs falling off of counters and tables so this might not be the most humane set-up "as-is". However, the idea is good and could probably be improved be lessening the impact of the fall. You could prop up the garbage pail to reduce the distance or put some material in the bottom to absorb impact.
all you really need is a dog i have a mixed pomeraninan and he catches them like nothing..its actually really gross and i dont know why he likes doing it but he likes the hunts -_-
I saw a mouse run across the floor a couple days ago. I bought poison and could not go through with it. Bought some mouse traps but after inspecting and testing them I thought it was terrible cruel. My last resort was the web. I found this fabulous idea here. I made my trap from a baby medice box, 3 coins and 2 tiny pieces of hotdog. I set the trap under my sink and waited. I heard the clink close to midnight and I ran to chek it out. There he was. I took him for a ride in my car and tossed him near some bushes. He jumped away into the grass and I could not help but laugh. I felt really good about it. It was as fun as fishing.
I thank those special people for putting up their little ideas and inventions. Your suggestions made it across the world. An Ecuadorian field mouse is happy and on the loose. Melanie. In Ecuador.
You can also consider using the boxes that the halogen bulbs come in just have to cut the flaps off and cut off the open end, they are longer and already squared so it will be easier to setup
I dont know why I am astounded at the level of cruelty and selfishness society has in general. Instead of trapping a mouse in a safe and loving way,most people want to kill or torture it with those glue traps.It really doesnt take much and they need a place to live too.We have taken every conceivable space and encroached on all animals territory.Its just not right.Take a few muinutes,buy or make a live,safe trap and release the little guys into a field or forest.Somewhere where they can live. We should not place ourselves so much higher than any animal...because we do things that are so horrible to one another for fame,money,things and ego..animals only do to survive. Thats my two cents..thanks for the helpful traps..
I agree 100%, and don't think for a minute that rat poison is a fast, die quick and easy thing. Rat poison causes internal bleeding that results in a slow agonizing 6 to 8 hour death and probably the most inhumane way to kill anything. Live traps and relocation is the only way to go.
ok i dont agree with the animal rights protester bellow you (thats puting it very, very, very, very, very kindly) one rats a vermin a pest that don't as fr as i know help at all the world. maybe im thinging of rats. and yes owls and other birds eat them. but back on track. oh a animal that is disease ridden dies of thirst. yea the bird eating poisoned mice will make that happen but one poisened mouse isn't gonna do all that. all of those reasons don't mean squat to me.
Rats are different than mice and can be a different story entirely. Some rats need snap trapping and some need to be live trapped and let go. The shy ones should be live trapped and let go by a river or field and the aggressive ones snap trapped. I have only had one rat that I had to snap trap. Poison is never an option.
well, to stop bait shyness, this can be used as a tool. just put your poison in the bucket then when the rat goes in, they eat the bait with poison and guess what happens....
however i do care that rats/mice/insects and other animal can quickly adapt to poison and we have to use stronger poisons and eventualy nothing will stop them. my advice kill them maualy or kepp them untill they die in a container sure i think it's inhumane but like the guy blow me said set it free
you know your name doesn't really suit you. hippies loved earth and everything that lived on it. no offence but your a hypocrite. i hope to god that a poor mouse doesn't venture into your house because it will be tortured to death by being starved or poisoned. it is just as easy to catch a mouse in a bucket and set it free whenever it is convenient for you, rather than wait days for it to slowly starve. have a heart.
Rat poison is a bad idea. And here is why: The poison causes the rats to die of thirst. Some of the poisoned mice will die indoors. Others, as they start to suffer, often go outside looking for water. Do you know what predators do? They look for the weakest animals to catch and eat. A hawk, owl, or other predator swoops down and eats your mouse. You have now given a small dose of poison to a beautiful animal. Now, these poisons do not disappear from the bird, they accumulate. Even if the toxin levels of one mouse are not high enough to kill the bird, it can kill their offspring, whether through the egg production process, or in the event the bird feeds its young with the toxic mouse. But, it doesn't stop at one mouse. A hawk needs to eat a lot of mice. There is a term for this, Biological Magnification. As you go higher up the food chain, the toxin is concentrated in the tissues. I suggest you take the time to use non-toxic pest management solutions. The paper tube method here is excellent, easy, and cheap. You could also keep a pet mouse for a couple of days before releasing it. A field mouse is way cuter than those homely white mice you get at the pet store. At our house, we catch shrews, voles, and 3 species of mice.
I am a huge animal lover and I always love learning more about how we can be nicer to everyone and everything. I would never want an birds especially to be harmed.
Sure they may look cute, but i don't think you'd want to catch wild mice as pets >_> They could be contaminated with diseases that show no symptoms in mice, but could prove fatal for humans. Aside from the fact that they can be ridden with disease, taming them is also another problem. If they're born in the wild, they should stay in the wild. The sudden change of environment could kill the mouse, or we do not have the means of raising these mice. It's better just to release them farther away from your home, or to just kill it if its causing a problem.
@ dragonreaper: understood. We don't actually keep them as pets, per se, although we have kept them around for a day or so. Never had one die on us and we certainly don't handle them. But we do take them a loooonngg way form home before releasing them. Usually under the porch of one of our annoying neighbors.
Actually it causes internal bleeding. The unsanitary and inhumane part is it will take them a while to die and then you have a dead mouse where you cant find it.
Have you ever tried to keep a wild mouse as a pet ? they are houdinis at the worst of times and can jump like they were fitted with springs, ordinary hampster cages will not do. The only thing that would hold the mouse i had was an 85 gallon fish tank covered with a window screen. And i got rid of it after a few days cause it stunk something fierce.
Plus it's not as dangerous if consumed by humans (treatment for ingestion of anticoagulant is high doses of vitamin K, however i would recommend in the first instance to go to hospital).
this is a great idea, but i need a way to catch a mouse on the ground!...my mouse squeezed itself through the bars on my rat cage and it jumped off of the dreeser onto the floor while i was asleep and i cannot find any ideas of how to trap it!?
I'm an animal lover, in fact. I've owned pet rats most of my life. HOWEVER, the "catch and release" idea is just BAD. Unless of course you're going to take the mouse you catch to be tested for disease, which I doubt any of you animal lovers would do. Mice can carry diseases in their feces which can be deadly to humans. By relocating the animal, you are actually not only relocating that animal but potentially relocating the disease as well. I hate that mice, rats, etc are hurt, however, if it comes down to a mouse or any other animal harming myself or my puppies, I'd take the animal out in a second.
If this was a human with AIDS and it was sleeping around with people knowing he/she had AIDS, I'm pretty sure you'd want it stopped. Well, these animals have the potential to create A LOT of harm. As a society we need to think with our brains a bit more and a little less with our hearts. I can say that with no malice, as I'm also the person who took in 7 stray dogs to the detriment of myself and my sick father because the animal shelter said they would put them down otherwise, due to a lack of space. At some point we have to take care of the human race otherwise we'll all be gone and have a world full of mice, etc. *shrugs*
"If this was a human with AIDS and it was sleeping around with people knowing he/she had AIDS, I'm pretty sure you'd want it stopped." So are you implying that we should kill people with AIDS?
We're doing such a great job of *not* "[taking] care of the human race" that we now have 7 billion people on this planet (~7x the world population in the 1920s). The human race is in no danger of being exterminated by mice. I appreciate your point but there's no reason to be an alarmist about it. It's not the human race vs. everyone else.
PDF Downloads As a Pro member, you will gain access to download any Instructable in the PDF format.
You also have the ability to customize your PDF download.
I thank those special people for putting up their little ideas and inventions. Your suggestions made it across the world. An Ecuadorian field mouse is happy and on the loose.
Melanie. In Ecuador.
I am a huge animal lover and I always love learning more about how we can be nicer to everyone and everything. I would never want an birds especially to be harmed.
LOVE THE TRAP IDEA TOO!
Have you ever tried to keep a wild mouse as a pet ? they are houdinis at the worst of times and can jump like they were fitted with springs, ordinary hampster cages will not do. The only thing that would hold the mouse i had was an 85 gallon fish tank covered with a window screen. And i got rid of it after a few days cause it stunk something fierce.
If this was a human with AIDS and it was sleeping around with people knowing he/she had AIDS, I'm pretty sure you'd want it stopped. Well, these animals have the potential to create A LOT of harm. As a society we need to think with our brains a bit more and a little less with our hearts. I can say that with no malice, as I'm also the person who took in 7 stray dogs to the detriment of myself and my sick father because the animal shelter said they would put them down otherwise, due to a lack of space. At some point we have to take care of the human race otherwise we'll all be gone and have a world full of mice, etc. *shrugs*
We're doing such a great job of *not* "[taking] care of the human race" that we now have 7 billion people on this planet (~7x the world population in the 1920s). The human race is in no danger of being exterminated by mice. I appreciate your point but there's no reason to be an alarmist about it. It's not the human race vs. everyone else.