Had mine built a bout a week before you built yours, I'm up to 11 kills now.
Choosy mother-#$%^: Choose Jiff!!!
You hear that Bob, works on cats???Works on cats and dogs too. Need different bait.
Look above on post #22.I just saw this on another forum. Looks like it'd zap the chit out of the mice.
I'm going to rig one up and plug it into a GFCI outlet in the shop.
A senior moment. No wonder it looked familiar.Look above on post #22.
I can't stop laughing!
An adolescent mouse can fit its body through a hole that is the size of a pen. An adult mouse can fit through a hole the size of a dime.Jun 16, 2020The main stream mouse and rat poisons are concentrated blood thinners. Taking a mouse for example, a mouse can squeeze through a hole just over 1/8th an inch in diameter. In doing so, they bruise. If they've recently consumed a mouse poison, the bruise will cause them to bleed to death internally. Bummer for them.
Point being, other animals consuming a poisoned mouse/rat should have minimal risk of being effected by the poison/blood thinner. However, there is a difference between no risk and minimal risk.
Sorry, it is a quarter of an inch that an adult mouse can fit through. The limitation is the skull.An adolescent mouse can fit its body through a hole that is the size of a pen. An adult mouse can fit through a hole the size of a dime.Jun 16, 2020
An 1/8 inch would seem impossible?????
Seon, if you plug it into a GFCI it won't work unless you don't hook the ground up. A GFCI monitors the difference in current going out on the black wire to the amount coming back on the white wire, if its more than 5 milliamps it trips. If you use the ground wire that current will split to both wires and it will trip. You can use the ground wire for support to mount it to your mesh but don't connect it to the plug ground prong.I just saw this on another forum. Looks like it'd zap the chit out of the mice.
I'm going to rig one up and plug it into a GFCI outlet in the shop.