Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Our biology teacher used to tell us of his admiration for the Chinese who he claimed had eradicated the house fly by mobilising the entire nation to swat, en masse.


I am just wondering if it would be possible to organise a London mouse eradication day. Round here they are getting bigger, they are getting smarter (they don't take poison from the little trays) and there are more of them. Have read all the good advice on here, like stuff all the air vents with wire wool etc. But all you need to do now is leave a door or window open and they're back. One has just nipped through the French doors and ran over my foot.


I'm thinking bussing in of cats, tiny little machine guns, etc? Surely someone can organise this, via the BBC or something?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/7223-mouse-eradication-day/
Share on other sites

Sticky boards are useless. I've got a few mice living with me at the moment and I've had enough of listening to them scratch away at night. I bought some rat traps (much more powerful than conventional mouse traps) with chocolate as bait but they're so strong that when one of the little critters trigers the trap it usually explodes leaving me to clean up the offal. I don't want to loose a toe to one of the traps either when I'm stumbling about at night.


Has anyone named their furry intruders yet? Mine are called 'Daff' n 'Dill' after daffodil.


Hopefully they'll be dead soon.

snoozequeen1 wrote:- (they don't take poison from the little trays)



Sprinkle it on to the floor they will be more likely to take it, or get some cooking chocolate melt it and add the poisonous grains, allow it to cool and break into pieces and bait traps. If the traps fail the bait should do it.

You?re all missing the route of the problem folks, cat food.


Stop feeding your cats and the mice will slowly disappear.


I blame advertising with their, ?I am an Iams cat but I can?t read? (yeah but you can bloody talk, eh) and the little cartoony one called Felix. I suspect cat influence in the upper echelons of the advertising industry ensuring the freeloading felines of suburbia continue their life of riley.

That's masterfull Brendan!


See that everyone. Take note, get your cats to work for their dinner. Once the mice are gone you can reward them with a well earned drink of water. To encourage them to produce results during the extermination, put motor oil in your cats water bowl. They wont drink it but they'll be thankful when it's replaced with water. Who knows, perhaps Brendan may have inspired some sort of socio-feline experiment here.

Ugh. I wish I could do that, with the sticky boards. But what do you do with stuck mouse? This is why I would need the tiny machine gun.


Doesn't seem to be need at the mo. to put poison in chocolate (and in any case I would forget and eat it myself).


The tip on scattering the poison granules, so it looks like dropped crumbs, is a top tip. Problem is they have been eating it for days now and seem to be thriving on it. Am sure they are getting bigger. Unless I have small rats.


Next door's cat is excellent mouser but she can't keep up, poor thing. She's done for two lots but this is fourth or fifth infestation. Also once you've put poison down, you don't know if cat is then going to consume poisoned mouse and croak too.


I get a week off, then they're back.


Feel we need London-wide effort, would be v good for renewing community spirit, as per The Blitz, and we could then have anti-mouse stations with home-guard cats stationed around the M25.

Huguenot Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I'm afraid that your Biology teacher was having

> you on about the Chinese.

>

> There is a fabulous piper available for hire, but

> beware his credit terms are somewhat onerous.


I was under the impression, perhaps misguided, that the Chinese (during the cultural revolution) were instructed to bang metal pots, pans, etc to scare off sparrows to prevent them from eating the crops.


From dawn till dusk, peasants did what they were told and sparrows began to drop from the sky due to sheer exhaustion. The plan had worked. However, the sparrows (or their Chinese equivilent) also ate all the bugs and worms that lived in the fields. With no predators these wee beaties flourished and devoured crops at a rapacious rate. The harvest failed miserably and hundreds of thousands starved.


The story may be apocryphal (although I think it is repeated in Wild Swans) but nonetheless is indicative of the madness inherent in Maoist political doctrine.

our mice seem to have gone.

We put down poison(one lot) and sticky traps (caught two)but also plugged in siren things in every mouse-attractive room. We havent seen any since june and this is in a house where they had got to the stage where they were sauntering around without a care in the world in front of our very eyes- so whichever of the devices has worked has worked.

Hmm, possibly d_c, but it also packs in an awful lot of cliches about the Chinese into one short tale....


It characterises them as innumerable uneducated, shortsighted, primeval, dogmatic automatons.


I know that would correspond with the prevailing ambitions of the local leadership of the time: the sacrifice and application of people power in a low technology world was really the only thing they had to run on.


So if it is an apocryphal tale, it could have been written by either side!


I shall investigate further!

I stand corrected.


There was indeed an official campaign called 'The Four Pests'.


The sparrows appear to have been the only one targeted in the end, but not so much through pan banging as nesting and egg stealing.


It only last two years from '58 to '60, when a consequent plague of locusts highlighted the folly of this unilateral extermination strategy.


One of the four pests was also the mosquitos, but again, the execution of the campaign wasn't through hand clapping, but the employment of strategies still used in Singapore - the eradication of stagnant water.


Did you know in Singapore you're only allowed to keep flowers in water for a maximum for two days?


Before anyone looks too steeply down their nose at the Chinese, I'd refer our earnest readers to the dustbowl of the USA in the 30s, the current over salination and desertification of southern Australia and the catastrophic breakdown in the UK's biodiversity cause by hedgerow removal between 1920 and the Hedgerows act of '97.


We could look at the introduction of rabbits to Australia, or even quite simply the destruction of the Great Barrier Reef.


All of these acts of mass self-destruction were caused, and continue to be caused by millions of people who get some really stupid ideas and refuse to let them go!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • That's odd, one of the claimed benefits of the Gala money is - "The site hire fee goes directly to supporting the delivery of the council’s Events service, which supports the delivery of up to 100 free-to-attend community events per year" I've asked for a list of these events, as without this I feel it can't realistically be used to justify the disruption. Can anyone name even 10 of these events? 5?
    • There’s an unusual cat in my garden that appears a bit lost and hungry. White and fluffy with grey parts and blue eyes. Seems like a house cat. I’m behind Goose Green off Ondine. 
    • As far as I am aware you have shown no interest in the Gala thread but anything you find to knock a local authority, and no doubt hope that it applies to Southwark LTNs, then off you go. I'd love to hear what you enjoy.  I've been to multiple festivals big and small, in life.  The line up at the Lambeth Show looks good.  Steamdown anyone? It's a balance between many factors, amenity Vs loss of amenity, disruption including noise during the event, damage to the park, income to the local authority during difficult times.  What is your view on these matters, or is it just a case that you smell meat? I cycled in the Massif Central when there was a big creative festival and that smelled of BBQ meat.  Similarly a Portuguese festival at Kensington Park. There are some people round my way who used to complain about the music at the Horniman on a summer Sunday afternoon.  This is not comparable to the disruption due to the Gala, I hasten to add.  But I was stunned at the time thinking how could they have issues with some soul/jazz/afro beat/samba/Latino etc  Shane they don't have the same number of free events any more.  I digress....
    • But I think there are striking similarities between the way Lambeth has managed the Brockwell events and residents therein and the way Southwark has with Gala..... It's how it pastes when you take text from another website (BBC) and is a good way to show that these are someone else's words and not something written by the author! 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...