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so I have a bunch of mice living in my kitchen, because I previously underestimated how well they can climb and jump (very well it turns out) and I was keeping my bird food bags in a bucket on the table. I thought that would be way too slippery for them to get in but mice are powerful.

I now put the bird food into a closed box with a weighted lid and I'm experimenting with using the bucket as a live trap for relocating these friends outside (I have a boundary against folks habitually using my kitchen as a bathroom and mice don't respect that which is why I want them to move out.)

I hope that by making sure that all food is sealed away from them and by relocating the mice that are here now, I can keep the issues at a minimum.

it was rough to read about how to do this on the internet cause even when you explicitly look for live/humane traps, you find a lot of people talking about deliberately killing these animals in very cruel ways. meanwhile here I am feeling a bit bad for even putting them outside cause I know they have social structures and the outside world is full of dangers for them.

I ended up making my own design cause I didn't have the materials on hand that folks on the internet used for theirs. the current trap is a plastic bucket with peanuts inside and plastic film over the top secured with a rubber band, and a small hole in the center of the film for them to get in. I release the mice a ways away from the house, in the fields by an unused shack and a small stream, and I put peanuts out there as well. so far I've relocated 3.


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in reply to @halcyon-garden's post:

You may want to look for "Integrated Pest Management" solutions for mice; I'm actually watching an EPA webinar on it for rodent management next week for some CEUs. The gist of it is that living things need food, water, and shelter, and if they can get all three somewhere (or 2 plus a third nearby), they will move in. By removing the food you've done well! Check for entry points around the house as well; field mice like that can squeeze through 1/4" (5-6mm)!

Here's a list of their on-demand webinars. They tend to be kind of dry but very informative: https://www.epa.gov/ipm/webinars-about-integrated-pest-management

I'm glad the mice had a nibble of peanuts before being relocated. Most mice are just seeking shelter, so bushes, grassy fields, and stone walls are great hiding spots to release them near.