Rat control

chrismahon

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I just thought I would share my experiences as it is that time of year again when rats become hungrier and start raiding the hens food. I leave mice alone generally as they are not so destructive, until they nest in my horticultural fleece that is! This isn't a subject for the squeamish and I hope I don't upset anyone. Remember rats carry very serious disease and must not be handled.

After 4 years I think I now have the rat population under control. I have tried various methods apart from poison, which I think is indiscriminatory and inhumain. Obviously the food is put away at night but they come out to eat the bits spilled and will dig into the storage bins if very hungry. Living alongside a canal doesn't help.

Airgun. Occasionally they are brave enough to come out in daylight and eat at the feeders and a good air rifle is needed. At dusk a rifle with a 30mm light tube telesight deals with them. For close work I tried an air pistol but they are too fast and open sights can't be aligned in bad light. Will try a red dot sight this year.

Cage traps. Small rat traps are fine but they have a very powerful spring door so have to be well away from chickens. I bait them with fruit on the hook, or sweetcorn, and stale feed scattering. Most I've had is 6 at once and had 24 in one week when I first started. Problem is drowning is now illegal after a test case by the RSPCA over a squirrel. So I have had to stop using that trap and split the problem. Largest rats are caught in a rabbit trap which has a soft close door so chickens can go in and be caught without harm -Daisy has been caught three times until she learned. The rats are despatched with a .22 PCP air pistol.

Snap traps. Small ones can be caught in plastic rat snap traps baited with peanut butter and are killed outright by the snap usually. The traps are drilled through and anchored to the ground with fishing line to a hook so that the rat doesn't take the trap -furthest one has got is 30 yards before that. Big ones are more problematic. I use 4" fenn snap traps which will break your fingers if you don't cock them carefully. These are buried in rat runs and covered with a small piece of black fleece before a thin layer of soil. This stops rain washing soil into the mechanism or exposing them. By law they must be covered over with a tunnel and checked every day. Rats are usually killed outright but live ones are despatched as above.
If anyone wants more info or has alternatives?
 
We have three cats, two females and a male. The male catches, kills and usually half eats. So we do not use poison on our property. The females catch and play with them and usually bring them for us to knock on the head and then smash with a brick for good measure. I firm throw to the ground knocks them unconscious and a brick to the head does the obvious, for those that don't have guns. We tend to get voles and mice as well. If you can't get grip of them you can place them in a carrier bag or old pillow case and swing with necessary force.
 
Arg! I know we have a couple (so far!) of rats in our garden as I have seen them on the bird table! We only got our hens last saturday and so far there has been no sign that the rats have tried to get to their food...but I know it's just a matter of time.

Previously, I didn't want to harm them but know we have the girls and I know they can be a danger to them I'm dreading how to tackle the problem. I couldn't bring myself to whack them and we don't have an air rifle and even the thought of clearing up dead bodies from traps freaks me out. I don't agree with poison so I'm stuck!
 
I used huge snap traps baited with peanut butter, and have to use pliers and wear leather gauntlet to set them. I did lose a finger nail despite this, as they are hard to set. I had a rat living u.beneath my Eglu, and when I cleaned it, found knaw marks round the vent holes.

Have used poison, but am not keen. Thanks for the info x
 
Thanks Molteaser. I hadn't thought of baiting the large traps as they have been so effective simply buried in the soil for catching the wise (and very big) rats that won't take the bait in the smaller snappers or go into the rabbit trap. These things are the size of baby rabbits. The biggest I have caught was in the rabbit trap (before I got the much cheaper 4"snappers) which I left baited with apples for two weeks without touching it. I thought I had caught a rabbit until I got close. The tail was a foot long!
 
I did find a dead one the other day, dessicated, and it was gigantic. I'm.amazed they've never taken the eggs or hens though.
 
We now have something taking the eggs out of the little Leghorns nest box and two rats that have set up home in runs and won't take the bait -its never ending. Problem with living alongside a canal I suppose. Think it's a squirrel or mink taking the eggs.

Must add this heavy rain has played havoc with the big snap traps. The soil has firmed up over the top of them and the traps don't go off. So I have to dig them up every week and re-set them.
 
I have a brook at the end of my garden and Im surprised I don't have more of a problem. There is also mink and polecats locally. My neighbours has also seen something in the street which, from her hand signals ( she's German) I'm thinking is a stoat or weasel...I'm.amazed my hens are still here! I

Eta: I've found knaw marks on my Eglu again, so will have to bait the traps again...
 
Fantastic information Chrismahon and perfectly timed for me - last weekend I discovered signs of rats where I keep my feed. It's on a pallet and too big to fit into bins unfortunately.

I used a modified electric rat zapper a few years ago when I had a rat problem - but this would only catch the young rats. As you say the bigger rats are quite clever and won't go into a baited trap.

My only tip to add is remove water (drinkers) where possible as they will not stray far from water (a little difficult living near the canal of course!)

Thanks again for some great advice...
 
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