Malc wrote:
Mimi wrote:
Malc wrote:
I would seriously consider a humane death trap, as catch and release can be stressful for the mouse and often leads to their slow death (as mentioned in that article I posted before)
Malc wrote:
I would seriously consider a humane death trap, as catch and release can be stressful for the mouse and often leads to their slow death (as mentioned in that article I posted before)
Have you ever used one? Because when I Googled them they weren’t for sale over here and cost $1600.
I do not want the mouse to be stressed, but carbon monoxide poisoning seems generally really unpleasant if human victims are anything to go by. Also PETA are the last animal rights organisation I would listen to.
Ah, when I searched for them I should have realised that the adverts at the top were not for the product, sorry I was not aware that they were so expensive.
I do think a quick death is more humane than a stressful extended slow death though.
When we had issues, I hated the fact that the kindest option was to kill them quickly. But they can be really dangerous to leave around, and anything else other than a quick death really is worse imo.
These house mice really do need to live in someone's house to survive, so even if you release it and it survives, you've just made it someone else's problem.
It's a problem with no easy solutions
It’s not in our house.
Quite apart from not wanting squashed mice everywhere I’ve heard far too many accounts of ‘not quite dead’ mice being found a day or two later. I don’t know enough to guess where that rates on the ‘humane’ scale, but the descriptions sound pretty upsetting to both human and mouse.
I have a five year old that is constantly in the shed looking for tools, toys, compost etc who I don’t want to keep away from part of his garden because there are traps that may be a danger to him.
Is (perhaps, when it works) snapping the neck more humane than trapping them? Maybe it is. I’d be surmising if I were to guess (though my guess would be for the percentage of times it doesn’t work, no). But do those kill traps work for my family in this situation? Not that I can see. I want to do the right thing here, but part of the right thing does involve looking after the humans that use that space as well.
I ordered a live trap in the end that’s got plenty of living space and ventilation, just had to guess at the style but was Amazon’s recommended one so went with that with no better guide, and if that doesn’t work I’ll look up the one that Squirt mentioned and try that if the reports show any promise.
EDIT: if Squirt’s cat hasn’t got there first.