Rat!!!!!!

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chickenlady

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #15 on: November 03, 2008, 18:25 »
My neighbours wife wont let him have any chickens cause when he had the last lot she saw a rat! but he has about 4 bird tables chocker block with food which probably would attract just as many rats i would of thought?
thinks her guardian angel`s gone on strike !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Foxy

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #16 on: November 03, 2008, 18:30 »
must be the cold weather bringing them all in - we found a dead one last week and have found evidence of more...... :?

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chickenlady

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #17 on: November 03, 2008, 18:35 »
Roll on summer! :roll:  then the foxes and rats can go back to living off the land rather than ours! :?

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Kate and her Ducks

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #18 on: November 03, 2008, 18:39 »
If only the foxes would live off the rats then everyone would be happy (well except the rats :roll: ).
Be like a duck. Calm on the surface but always paddling like the dickens underneath.

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Hawkins

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #19 on: November 03, 2008, 19:54 »
Guys not wanting to send any of the little monsters your way but what you need to get rid of the rats is a MINK.
I'm only joking, I wouldnt wish one on any of you but it does seem to have cleared up our Rat problem. :D  :D

EM
Em  


We dont stop playing because we grow old, we grow old because we stop playing.

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Spadefighter

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #20 on: November 03, 2008, 20:56 »
My uncle came up with a blinding plan to relieve his chickens of the rat population:

First, bung up all the rat holes with rags except one. Into this hole, insert old vacuum cleaner hose. Attach said hose to exhaust of Honda 750 with half choke and give it lots of revs for a few minutes. Remove rags, dispatch staggering half-gassed rats with shovel.
Proper job.

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chickenlady

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #21 on: November 03, 2008, 20:59 »
:lol:  A friend said she was advised to bung up holes with rocks and pour petrol down the remaining hole then drop in a match! :shock:  probably would of taken out the whole garden as well as the rats :lol:  :lol:

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raeburg

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #22 on: November 03, 2008, 22:38 »
Anyone tried eradibait?  Does it do what it says on the tin?  Or is it better to get a more conventional anticoagulant type of rat killer?

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Vember

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #23 on: November 03, 2008, 22:42 »
I think Kate has and from what i remember it worked a treat :)
I'll see if I can find her post ...
Here we go

Kate and her Ducks
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Location: Liverpool
 Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2008 8:08 pm    Post subject:      

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I got some eradibait over the internet. Liked the sound of something non-toxic to birds and wildlife. Bought a huge tub as assumed that they will be an ongoing problem. Haven't had to refill the traps in months!!!! No evidence of rats after the first 5 days. Think its great!!!  

 
Sarah :D

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chickenlady

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #24 on: November 03, 2008, 22:51 »
Thought you meant Kate had used the petrol down the holes method for a minute there vember  :lol:

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raeburg

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #25 on: November 03, 2008, 22:56 »
Excellent.  The little so and so's have been gnawing around the coop windows (apart from the one that drown in the water butt).  What type of cat is that Sarah in your avatar?

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Kate and her Ducks

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #26 on: November 03, 2008, 23:51 »
Vembers right, eradibait worked a treat for me. The only problem I had is that the lid wasn't aritight and I left it in the shed where it sucked up all the moisure and all the pellets fell apart into this powdery mush and a load was wasted so really do keep it somewhere dry!

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Bodger

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #27 on: November 04, 2008, 06:52 »
I posted this on the forum when I arrived. I thinks its worth having a look at.  


Well I’m only really qualified to talk on one subject and as I would like to contribute to this new forum , my chosen topic as a one time professional pest controller, has got to be that of vermin.

In my work I use a veritable arsenal of rodenticide, pesticide, gas and traps against the constant menace of a seemingly ever growing throng of pests.

We as chicken keepers are in the frontline when it comes to the number one pest species. The Rat! We owe it to our neighbours, families and to our birds to wage a 365 days of the year all out war against the rat. I shouldn’t have to tell you of the dangers they pose but if you’d seen some of the sights that I’ve beheld, then you would understand why I say that even one rat on your place is unacceptable.

Ugh! Rats! I hate them.

The number one tool against rat has got to be poison. A good dog or a trap will catch rats but it will never get them all. The right poison put down in the right way often will.

When I turn out to an infestation I split the job into two definite halves. The first is to get rid of the rats and then just as importantly to try and prevent re-infestation .

Rats need two things to survive – that’s food and harbourage. If you can deny one or both of them, then you are on to a winner.

Most of the measures which need to be taken are just sheer common sense but if you are anything like me then you are an expert at putting off the blatantly obvious.

Firstly, do get yourself secure food bins with tight fitting lids. Don’t leave food in paper sacks and expect rats and mice to find the paper impenetrable.

Do try to feed your birds the right amount of food so that they clean up pretty quickly. Don’t leave great amounts at the bottom of runs especially after the birds have gone to roost.

Now onto harbourage. Harbourage is pest control jargon for somewhere to live. Unless you are fortunate enough to have tailor-made accommodation, the chances are that your bird houses will have inherent design faults that will encourage rats to stay for bed and breakfast with you. However if you keep your place tidy then you are on the right track.
By tidy, I mean get the scrap man in to remove that rusting pile of old junk and put a match to that pile of old wood or rubbish and generally get rid of that rat hotel!

Two things that I would suggest that you try and do whenever possible is to raise your existing sheds up off the floor and try to get 18 -24 inches clearance so that you can see if you have got unwanted visitors beneath your buildings.

Secondly, you can save all the tin sheet you can get and get it nailed flush to the bottom of all your doors and even consider using it to clad vulnerable areas

Now down to poison. The number one rule with poison is don’t skimp. Being ‘tight’ with your poison could mean that the rats get a sub-lethal dose and encourage resistance or bait shyness.

Warfarin has been on the market for 30-40 years and is known as a first generation anti-coagulant. You can still get it but it really has come to the end of its shelf life. With Warfarin you have to get the rats to eat an amount of poison over a period of time. Warfarin is what is known as a multi dose poison.

In the past ten years we have had the advent of a number of so called second generation anti-coagulants. They still use the same methodology to kill the rats but are single-dose poisons. The rats have to consume a lot less of the poison and only have to have one feed on the bait to get a good kill rate.

Down to practicalities. You need to keep poison down in the form of bait stations all year round and in that way you’ll never get a build up of vermin.

Bait stations can take the form of lengths of plastic or clay pipes placed in strategic positions. If you have the pipes about 3 foot long you can spoon the bait into the middle of it so that only rats can get at it.

Rat poison is now also sold in the form of wax blocks. These are excellent, if a bit expensive. They are weather resistant and can be nailed to the sides of sheds on rat runs and are less likely to attract the chickens.

One thing that I would advise against is the use of scatter bags. Although they might appear handy they aren’t as good as they are cracked up to be. Rat colonies have a definite hierarchy and the dominant rats often carry the bags away to keep them from their lesser brethren, hide them and forget where they put them so the poison is lost and therefore wasted.

Yeah! When it comes to pests I’m a mine of information and could literally go on and on, and if any of you members need advice on rodents or insects etc, then just PM me !

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Vember

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #28 on: November 04, 2008, 08:46 »
Quote from: "raeburg"
 What type of cat is that Sarah in your avatar?

Hi Rae, The pic is the original Vember, he was a blue point siamese :D

Fantastic advice there Bodger, Ta :)

Sarah :)

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raeburg

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Rat!!!!!!
« Reply #29 on: November 04, 2008, 09:05 »
Ta Sarah and Bodger.

I had  siamese cat for many years and an excellent form of pest control it was too!  The current moggies are getting on a bit and only manage young or ill rats these days!

My allotment is between a canal and a railway line, so there are a lot of places for rodents to live that I have no control over - including tumble down sheds etc on empty plots.  I know they are around - trying to dig into the run and gnaw through the coop windows (and the floater in the waterbutt).

They don't get in the feeds stuff (metal bins etc) and feeders are not left out during the night.  coop is raised up on concrete blocks etc .I JUST HATE RATS!

Rae

 

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