5 tips for getting rid of vermin
It takes work, but you can rid your house of vermin
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It takes work, but you can rid your house of vermin
On my way home last night, I called to check-in on a friend. She’d asked me for a BB-gun. I don’t normally get those types of requests, so I was just a tad curious as to why she required a non-lethal, but potentially harmful device. She summed it up in one word: Squirrels.
Apparently for the last seven months, she and her husband have battled squirrels. At night they hear them in their attic and during the day they watch them run back and forth from the roof, to the electricity wires, to the waiting cover of the surrounding trees.
And the BB-gun is a last resort. Half a year ago, my friend called in a professional rodent removal company. It didn’t work. The squirrels came back. Then they tried sealing up any holes in the roof and repairing any broken soffits. Apparently they’ve missed some, because it didn’t work. The squirrels came back. Now, she’s desperate. And she’s not the only one.
Fall is when many home owners across Canada will start to notice unwelcome residents in their homes. Raccoons, spiders, mice, rats, opossums, skunks and even feral cats will begin to look for warm, dry shelter, during Canada’s cold winter months—often that shelter is found under the roofs of our homes (and the walls, and the baseboards, well, you get the picture). Just recently, a Regina, Saskatchewan family found 102 garter snakes in their basement and when they started poking around, they realized that the snakes had already started migrating—making nests in their kitchen, bathrooms and bedrooms.
The good news is that you can stop or prevent vermin infestations. The bad news is that it’s patient, persistent work.
Just ask my husband. Despite long work days at his renovation company, he spent almost the entire Spring season relocating dozens of raccoons. This is before we learned that it’s illegal to trap and relocate wildlife in the City of Toronto (the only legal way to do this is to call a professional rodent removal company. I should point out: It’s also illegal to shoot an animal with a BB-gun!). Still, I have to say baiting raccoons with peanut butter and trapping them in a cage actually works. We definitely reduced the number that ransacked our refuse and we were able to humanely relocate them to a suitably forested area away from homes. To find out if trapping is legal in your city call your local Humane Society or get in touch with your municipality’s animal services department.
But even if you do decide to trap (either personally or professionally) that only gets rid of current vermin. To prevent their return and stop other critters from taking up residence in your home, follow these five tips:
For those that want to use natural or chemical-free deterrents here’s a good list:
While my friend is still looking for a BB-gun (she’s only half-serious), the fact is there really isn’t a magic spray or device that can make vermin, such as squirrels or mice, disappear. Some companies will attest to the power of predator urine, mothballs, ammonia-soaked rags, or ultrasonic emitters, but this is just the vermin equivalent of snake oil, sold by snake oil salesmen—they don’t work. The one and only way to take care of a vermin problem is to trap and remove (or, in some cases, such as mice, trap and kill). Follow the five steps above, consistently and repeatedly, and your vermin problems with (eventually) go away.
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