“IF THEY CAN FEED ON SEED, THEY WILL NOT TAKE THE POISON. MICE ARE SO RESOURCEFUL THAT THEY CAN LEARN TO FEED DURING THE DAY BUT OFFERING THEM ONLY POISON AT NIGHT WILL USUALLY SOLVE THE PROBLEM.”
Members’ experiences on this method would be welcome. The obvious alternative to traps is poison. I greatly dislike the use of poison since it can get into the food chain and because death is not swift. Presumably it could also poison a cat if a cat caught a mouse which had eaten poison. I look on poison as a last resort. However, to deal with rats and, in some situations, with mice, there seems to
12 BIRD SCENE
be no alternative. The mouse poison which you can buy in a hardware store is unlikely to be effective over the long term, since mice will eventually become immune to it. It is therefore advisable to contact the vermin control department of the local council. On one occasion I saw a rat in my garden and a very helpful man from the Council arrived with some blocks of poison placed inside small cardboard cartons. There
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