The Poison

We purchased some RatSak poison sachets and followed the instructions for placing the baits. You should place the poison baits in hard to reach places. Obviously you don’t want the poison to be eaten by anything other than the rats and mice so you may wish to place the poison under a cover such as a plastic plant pot with a hole cut out of it. These plastic things are also pretty good for deploying snail pellets throughout the garden.

We put the baits on the fence post we had seen the rats use as an access way as well as dropping two through the cracks of the decking down to where Paddy thinks the rats might live.

The next day the most unexpected thing happened. The rats had liked the baits so much they decided to dig a new entry to their house and drag the poison sachet back to the nest.

Rat hole

Rat hole

Oh, and another broccoli was completely stripped. I’m pretty sure two or three cherry tomatoes hanging low on the vine were also missing…

I stuck the remaining poison sachet deep in the hole and waited to see what happened the next day.

The next day the hole was clear (the sachet having presumably been taken back to the nest) but another brocolini was stripped leaving only two plants remaining un-nibbled.

I went to Bunnings to get more RatSak. The instructions say that the baits can take four to six days and that you should keep restocking taken baits so I bought another 5 baits and deployed them in the same spots. The next night the baits that i could see were untouched. The bait Paddy and I stuffed in the rat’s tunnel was still there so I figured it might be having effect..

No more broccolis were eaten but the other pea seedling was stripped bare.

Paddy and I were entertaining guests one night when all of a sudden a mouse ran out of the hole and stopped in front of us just next to the limestone garden wall

It was a normal mouse but it was obviously very groggy from eating the rat poison it was so sick we were able to catch it just by dropping a plastic microwave container over it.

Like all cute mice it looked at me as if to say “why.. you… poison.. mee?” and I felt my friends look at me like the Butcher of Kensington for poisoning such cute little mice.

We weren’t sure what to do with the mouse. It was obviously very sick and probably dying from the poison. In a rare Lord Of The Flies moment my friend offered to help it on it’s way with the aid of a big stick but when we bumped the container the mouse looked a bit more lively so we figured it might have a chance.

The mouse

The mouse

We gave the mouse a reprieve from the big stick by letting it go in a box of box of books sitting on our verge awaiting council pickup.

about 4 days later the next bait was taken.. I wonder how many more there are.. we only have two council pickups per year 😉

A protective fence around the rat trap

A protective fence around the rat trap

All up we’ve used 15 baits so far and the rats are still around. We’ve decided to deploy the rat trap, but this time we have built a protective fence around the trap to stop cats and indigenous fauna from stepping on it.

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The Rats

Pssssst!

Pssssst!

When we went away on holiday we left about 3 roma tomatoes on the vine in the hope they would ripen while we were away. We got back and sure enough the tomatoes were still growing well. Seeing as they had done so well and we had so much to unpack we left them on the vine.

The next day we had one of Perth’s s thermonuclear hot blast days – near 40 degree Celsius heat. The next morning both of the cloth bags around the 3 tomatoes had been ripped open and the tomatoes were no where to be seen. Paddy thought it might have been me that harvested them because the cloth bags were opened. We checked our garden camera for signs of movement and they were definitely eaten between 6:30pm and 7:30pm the previous evening. Unfortunately we only have footage before and after the attack because it was night and the attackers were too small to set off the sentry lights.

We even found a bird dropping suspiciously close to the last known whereabouts of the romas and at first we thought that it could have been eaten by the parrots in our area, but paddy figured that a bid would definitely have triggered the lights.

On the ground under the bush we found a also small amount of tomato skin. Not the fleshy part, just the very thin skin of the tomato. Whatever it was is seemed like it didn’t like the crusts…

Perhaps the rats were really thirsty from the near 40 degree heat and decided to try my tomatoes as a refreshing summer snack.

With the romas completely gone and the plant spent we pulled up the tomato and checked the scores.

Of the 7 tomatoes that grew 3 were eaten by cabbage moths and worms another 3 were eaten by the rats. So we only got one seventh of the tomato produce for ourselves. Nature seems to have exacted a hefty price on borrowing a square or two for Paddy’s Garden!

We’d almost forgotten about the tomato incident when we planted 8 bok choi seedlings…

The first night we lost 2 bok choi seedlings. Paddy was very annoyed. He even seemed to think he may have seen something moving outside and he was certainly interested in what was under the wooden decking.

What's under the decking?

What's under the decking?

The seedlings were absolutely stripped bare…

Nibbled bok choy seedling

Nibbled bok choi seedling

The next night was the same, another 1 and a half seedlings. The rats were scaling the 15cm high pots and then eating the seedlings. Only the leaves were gone with a tiny pile of the larger stems from the bok choi seedling left. The rats were completely defoliating each plant in order.

Nibbled bok choy seedling

Nibbled bok choi seedling

If things kept progressing it was going to prove impossible to support the appetite of the rats so we decided to bring in the heavy weaponry. We purchased 2 TomCat reusable mouse traps and set them close to where the bok choi plants were.

Paddy says that you always have to put rat and mice traps as close to where the mice are or the ‘tracks’ they run along. Most mice and rats will run along walls rather than be caught out in the open so place your traps on the edges of walls or garden beds. In our case we put the traps along one run of the fence where we had seen a shadow move one night. The other we put by the bok choi and the few remaining tomatoes on our last healthy plant.

The results were poor. One of the traps had been set off but we hadn’t caught anything… then we paid attention to the garden. The rats had obviously decided instead to finish off another 2 seedlings. What was even more worrying is that the tops were missing of the pea seedlings. Paddy looked pretty concerned. The Rats seemed to have a wide ranging diet.

Rats eat pea seedlings

Rats eat sweet pea seedlings

The next night two sweet pea seedling were completely gone. It seemed the rats really liked the leafy parts and tips of the plants. One plant has survived (pictured) but the other two looked pretty much stripped but we left them in anyway.

We purchased a TomCat rat trap from Bunnings that seemed to have a fair spring in it. The other TomCat mouse traps seemed to get set off from easily from rain or wind and we needed a bigger trap to catch the mother rat – apparently Paddy thinks there’s a big one somewhere..

TomCat rat trap

TomCat rat trap

We set the trap but I was pretty worried about catching the neighbors cat or even Paddy himself so we were constantly moving it or releasing the mechanism so that it wouldn’t cost us thousands of dollars in vet bills.

Smart mouse trap

Smart mouse trap

The next night was even worse. The rats had finished every bok choi seedling we had leaving just half of the last one but they’d obviously gotten bored of the bok choi (or wary of the big rat trap sitting next to the last plant) so they started on the broccolini.

Rats eat Brocolini

Rats eat Brocolini

The broccoli had been growing well since the episode with the caterpillars – who turned out not to like Paddy’s recipie for garlic fire. Each night another plant would be completely stripped of leaves like the one above.

We decided something more had to be done, so we visited Bunnings in search of the smart mouse and rat traps that wont hurt cat or dogs. We installed two of these traps as close as we could the to rat tracks and baited them with peanut butter.

The results were the same, no rats, no mice, another broccolini was missing and we were now looking at four plants surviving from the initial eight plants.

At this rate the broccolinis would only last to the end of the week! Paddy and I decided that the only option was chemical warfare. We read that people had good results with the RatSak sachets and so we picked up a packet of 4 for $5 from Bunnnings.

In the next post we test the poison baits…

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