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Well this post reminded me that the last few nights I've heard some mouse-like noises in the attic so I put out a few glue traps.

As I was just about to fall asleep I heard the little bugger(s) flopping around in one or more of the traps.

Now it's midnight and I am wide awake, but I got the sucker! :thumbsup:

Disposal at daybreak!
 
Well this post reminded me that the last few nights I've heard some mouse-like noises in the attic so I put out a few glue traps.

As I was just about to fall asleep I heard the little bugger(s) flopping around in one or more of the traps.
Part II-The results

Went up in the attic the next morning. Found the baited glue trap, nothing but glue in it.

Insulation looks like there were monkeys playing in it all night long.

I figured that as I am in Georgia, it must be another of the Bigfoot they thought they found here.

Exterminating company came today.

Yup, Bigfoot OK.


(Naw just wanted to make you laugh)

"You have builder's gap"

WTH is "Builder's Gap"?

Apparently building codes in GA dictate or allow for the roof sheathing and the side walls to have an unprotected air gap for "ventilation". The area does not have to be protected with any type of screening and is only covered by the overhang of the roof shingles.

Yer s**tting me, right? Nope. We went around the house and he showed me the gap, as described. A total of 174 ft of openings to seal up. They're doing that on Monday.

On Tuesday, they're bringing 2 monkeys to spend the night in the attic to look for whatever is in there. Still hoping for Bigfoot. l:)
 
I believe I found their entry/exit points, at least the visible ones. Looks like they got under the siding and chewed holes through the wood at the corners of the roof at both ends of the house, and at the third corner above our bedroom. Mice or rats maybe? I didn't see much of anything on the floor with all the blown insulation, but there were a couple spots by the eave that looked like something had been nesting in the insulation, there was some gray stuff and black specks mixed in with the snow white insulation there. Picked up some Critter Ridder from Home Depot as Andy said and set up some traps and poison. Got some sheetmetal to patch over the holes. Home ownership, ain't it great.

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Those aren't holes chewed by any critter, those are holes produced by human beings with hammers. Those holes are there because when the house was built the builder ordered the gable trusses pre-sheathed and when the crane showed up to lift them up on the roof they had to pop those holes in them to get the chain through to lift them. I have been in construction my whole life, that is as typical as it gets.

Jeff
 
Those aren't holes chewed by any critter, those are holes produced by human beings with hammers. Those holes are there because when the house was built the builder ordered the gable trusses pre-sheathed and when the crane showed up to lift them up on the roof they had to pop those holes in them to get the chain through to lift them. I have been in construction my whole life, that is as typical as it gets.

Jeff
buzz kill
 
I thought this was going to be one of those "the lights are on but nobody's home" threads.

Or "One wheel in the sand..."

Or "One taco short of a combination meal..."

Or "Not much upstairs but man, what a staircase!" (for women only :thumbsup:)

Or "Not the sharpest tool in the shed..."

Or...
 
Discussion starter · #30 ·
Those aren't holes chewed by any critter, those are holes produced by human beings with hammers. Those holes are there because when the house was built the builder ordered the gable trusses pre-sheathed and when the crane showed up to lift them up on the roof they had to pop those holes in them to get the chain through to lift them. I have been in construction my whole life, that is as typical as it gets.

Jeff
Yes, thanks! I'm not in construction and those holes were the only things that seemed to stick out when I looked around the attic but that makes sense. Well I still have critters up there, figuring out how and where they got in is going to take some more work.
 
Update -Part III

Had the critter company come and seal up the "builders gap" using specially designed heavy gauge vented alum flashings. (BTW, the builder's gap, was a 3 1/2" wide gap between the roof flashing and the wall. Cats could have gone through it.)

Based on "forensic evidence" (tunneling in the insulation, late night sounds vs. daytime sounds-eve-=rats/mice, day=squirrel, dropping size) 6 rat traps were baited and set.

2 days later- Critter company back-all bait is gone, no traps were triggered, no sign of bugs or other vermin that could have done that. Traps re-baited with rodent attractant.

2 days later-Critter company back-Bait gone in all traps, again. Only found 5 of the 6 traps. After searching for about 20 min. found 1 small rat 1/2 trapped and buried in the insulation, 1/2 alive.

"They can't get out to eat, so we'll get 'em one by one. If there's one, there's more."

Reminds me of a story about my now 31 yr old niece. They had just moved to AZ. My Mother-in-law was watching her that day. She was 5 at the time.

She saw a small rattler on the patio and yelled. In a panic, my mother-in-law grabbed a long handled shovel and started pounding on the snake.

With that my niece yells out, "BEAT THE SNAKE NANNY! BEAT THE F***ING SNAKE!"

We remind her of that every time we can. Of course it's most fun when we can embarrass her. :D
 
I'm telling ya, a $17 container of Critter Ridder from Home Depot will chase those suckers away. I tried the trap route, they just laughed at it and did their little dance on top, almost like they were mocking me. I used that stuff 3 years ago and didn;t have another problem until last week. Used it again, and they were gone the next day.
 
it's more like that million rounds per minute one they're talking about in one of those other forums :)
 
Update -Part III

Had the critter company come and seal up the "builders gap" using specially designed heavy gauge vented alum flashings. (BTW, the builder's gap, was a 3 1/2" wide gap between the roof flashing and the wall. Cats could have gone through it.)

Based on "forensic evidence" (tunneling in the insulation, late night sounds vs. daytime sounds-eve-=rats/mice, day=squirrel, dropping size) 6 rat traps were baited and set.

2 days later- Critter company back-all bait is gone, no traps were triggered, no sign of bugs or other vermin that could have done that. Traps re-baited with rodent attractant.

2 days later-Critter company back-Bait gone in all traps, again. Only found 5 of the 6 traps. After searching for about 20 min. found 1 small rat 1/2 trapped and buried in the insulation, 1/2 alive.

"They can't get out to eat, so we'll get 'em one by one. If there's one, there's more."

Reminds me of a story about my now 31 yr old niece. They had just moved to AZ. My Mother-in-law was watching her that day. She was 5 at the time.

She saw a small rattler on the patio and yelled. In a panic, my mother-in-law grabbed a long handled shovel and started pounding on the snake.

With that my niece yells out, "BEAT THE SNAKE NANNY! BEAT THE F***ING SNAKE!"

We remind her of that every time we can. Of course it's most fun when we can embarrass her. :D
I had the same problem with the traps not tripping. Wrap half to three quarters of the trigger in saran wrap. Bait it with peanut butter. They like to eat, when the boogers nibble and pull on the plastic, wack! If the traps to small to kill em, tie it down. Glad I moved away from Florida and the bayou(swamp). Don't miss the rats at all. I think these were tree rats or roof rats(?). 8 to 10 inch in length bodies, nasty.
 
Thats actually the next step the "terminators" will take if the traps are again empty but not triggered.

The roof and/or tree rats we had in SO FL were also big. This GA rat was 1/2 to 1/3 that size.

We used to also have crapload of chipmunks, but we had a large volume of owls take over the area about mid-summer and keep returning. All but 1 chipmunks are gone.

Ironically, I was awoken this AM by a "fight" between a VERY large horned owl and mocking birds that was taking place on my roof gutter. I've seen that before and I say large owl because the mocking birds looked like sparrows next to it. They just kept dive bombing it with glancing blows. The owl never budged, just left as if it was annoyed by all the attention.
 
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