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Bill



Member Since: 18 Nov 2017
Location: Essex / Normandy
Posts: 1230

United Kingdom 
Mice

We park our cars in the drive way. Rural area.

The mice have in the past eaten a lighting wire in my old car. A friend fixed /soldered it afterRR quoted £600 to replace !

Destroyed my wife’s car BMW 4 twice, this time will cost best part of a grand to put right.

As an aside taken out my lawnmower twice.


Reluctant to use bait boxes because of secondary death/ build up of toxins in owls and other birds we have round and about.

Any suggestions short of putting the cars on bricks. ?


Bill Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc

He who dies with the most toys wins...

Post #656598 14th Feb 2023 2:24pm
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stan
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Member Since: 13 Jul 2010
Location: a moderate moderated moderator moderating moderately in moderation
Posts: 35263

United Kingdom 

buy a few cats.. ... - .- -.




Y. O. L. O.
.

Post #656600 14th Feb 2023 2:26pm
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rvbush



Member Since: 08 Jan 2016
Location: Leamington Spa
Posts: 537

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Vogue TDV8 Stornoway Grey

Quote:
buy a few cats


This!! We have outbuildings with horse feed and hay etc.in with two stable cats. No mice or rodents of any sort anywhere to be seen and no evidence of same. Smell of cats keeps them away. Drives:
2010 FFRR TdV8 Vogue - Stornoway Grey
2010 FFRR TdV8 Vogue SE - Zermatt Silver
1998 BMW E36 M3 GTII

Post #656603 14th Feb 2023 2:53pm
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Tinman



Member Since: 22 Mar 2017
Location: kent
Posts: 1186

United Kingdom 2017 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Silicon Silver

Traps with peanut butter 2017 SDV8 4.4 silicon silver AB
2012 TDV8 4.4 Stornaway Grey AB
2011 TDV8 4.4 Buckingham Blue
2012 VW V6 3.0 Tougreg

Post #656604 14th Feb 2023 3:14pm
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Baltic Blue



Member Since: 13 Aug 2015
Location: North Wales
Posts: 3763

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Vogue SE TDV8 Baltic Blue

Chocolate works well in traps also.
Mike G reg 2.5VM Vogue Portofino red 1991- 1999
V reg 2.5td P38 Rioja red 1999- 2006
53 reg td6 Vogue Oslo blue 2006- 2015
11 reg 4.4 TdV8 Vogue SE. Baltic blue 2015- date.
https://www.fullfatrr.com/forum/topic56162...tty+affair

Post #656609 14th Feb 2023 3:41pm
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Bill



Member Since: 18 Nov 2017
Location: Essex / Normandy
Posts: 1230

United Kingdom 

stan wrote:
buy a few cats..


I doubt the cat will last for very long being dog territory! We had a cat sanctuary next door , our last dog never having seen a cat until one day it had . Caught it around the cats middle & simply tossed it over the fence. Must be in the genes.

Thinking of trying a more substantial humane traps and dumping them nearby. Prefer to knock them off.

I would have expected there to be a smell they don’t like….must google cat smell for sale. Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc

He who dies with the most toys wins...

Post #656616 14th Feb 2023 4:11pm
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Bill



Member Since: 18 Nov 2017
Location: Essex / Normandy
Posts: 1230

United Kingdom 

Now I know I’m going mad


 Filters are in fact so good that in certain circumstances, when the ambient air is already polluted, a diesel car will tend to extract more particles from the air than it emits. Emissions Analytics worked with........etc etc

He who dies with the most toys wins...

Post #656617 14th Feb 2023 4:15pm
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recordman



Member Since: 08 May 2013
Location: Kent
Posts: 114

United Kingdom 2017 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Aruba

Allegedly, they don't like the smell of peppermint.

I had mice nest in the engine bay of my car, fortunately no damage done. I brushed on a coating of peppermint oil from the baking aisle at Tesco and they haven't been back. 2017 SDV8 Autobiography

Post #656650 14th Feb 2023 8:34pm
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Phoenix



Member Since: 16 May 2022
Location: Gone
Posts: 1631

United Kingdom 

Here was the cause of 'dash vibration' - first job on Monday morning, poor little fecker was dead, legs were liberally spread around inside the heater box, not a great start to the week!




Initially I thought it was just a big leaf and was going to hook it out with a pick until I saw the eye...

Post #656661 14th Feb 2023 9:29pm
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SamThomas



Member Since: 12 Nov 2021
Location: South East
Posts: 293

United Kingdom 2003 Range Rover Vogue Td6 Baltic Blue

Tinman wrote:
Traps with peanut butter


Cruel !

We have 6+ cats & they do catch the unfortunate creatures occasionally. When food is abundant a couple of outdoor cats will keep them at bay. Dog's are not much of a problem for cats once they have been too close & received a nose swipe !

The humane traps work well with chocolate as bait - we use them & then release the mice in the fields.

Post #656670 14th Feb 2023 10:02pm
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Phoenix



Member Since: 16 May 2022
Location: Gone
Posts: 1631

United Kingdom 

A mate of mine used to put a dot of paint on the back of their necks when they were caught in his humane traps, he found he was catching the same ones over & over again. all that varied was the time/distance calculation based upon where he dropped them off...

Post #656673 14th Feb 2023 10:07pm
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dingg1



Member Since: 29 Jun 2013
Location: PORTUGAL
Posts: 1340

2007 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.2 SC V8 Stornoway Grey

Agreed Phoenix, they know their territory and head back to home, unless you're releasing them miles away.

Vermin at the end of the day and killing them should be no issue....

Post #656684 14th Feb 2023 11:27pm
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kevinp



Member Since: 28 Sep 2019
Location: Telford
Posts: 1205

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Autobiography TDV8 Santorini Black

I got rid of the mice in my garage with one of them battery powered zappers.
It kills them instantly. Humane?

Post #656686 14th Feb 2023 11:51pm
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p38arover



Member Since: 16 Dec 2015
Location: Western Sydney
Posts: 1523

Australia 

Quote:

The rodents’ popularity with predators raises concerns that widespread rodenticide use is causing inadvertent poisonings of native species, particularly birds. The New South Wales Environmental Protection Authority recently issued a warning about improper use of poison-coated grain–for example, its distribution too close to native bushland—after an investigation into bird deaths in central New South Wales found some of the deaths were caused by mouse baits.

The main rodenticide used in agricultural settings is zinc phosphide, which is used to coat grains left out for mice to eat. It turns into deadly phosphine gas in the acid environment of the stomach, but this quickly dissipates and is unlikely to cause secondary poisonings


See in this story: https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion...bers-68963 Ron B. VK2OTC
2003 L322 V8 Auto
2007 Yamaha XJR1300
Previous: 1983, 1986 RRC; 1995, 1996 P38A; 1995 Disco1; 1984 V8 County 110; Series IIA

Post #656690 15th Feb 2023 3:02am
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Phoenix



Member Since: 16 May 2022
Location: Gone
Posts: 1631

United Kingdom 

dingg1 wrote:
Agreed Phoenix, they know their territory and head back to home, unless you're releasing them miles away.

Vermin at the end of the day and killing them should be no issue....

I have mixed views on this one, firstly, I was brought up in a rural environment where it was routine to hold various kinds of vermin at bay by extermination - I do agree with kevinp, make the kill as clean & painless as possible, just as my Grandfather who was a gamekeeper taught me, respect life, even in death.

Having said that, I've made a 'killing' over the years repairing rodent damage on vehicles....

Post #656693 15th Feb 2023 7:12am
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