Get Rid Of Mouse Safely And Sanely

"Object: get rid of mouse." If your day planner includes this entry, you may be wondering where to start. What can you do with a creature that can climb horizontally or vertically, can fit through a crack less than a quarter-inch in width, jump twelve inches into the air and reproduce starting at six to ten weeks of age, producing 25-50 offspring a year?

If you want to get rid of mouse infestations, you have a variety of options, some less pleasant than others. You may decide to use poisons or traps, but these solutions may be hazardous to family pets and result in your having to dispose of pests' corpses once they're dead. The horror of mechanical traps can be explained by anyone who has checked the trap to find an animal still alive but in agony. To get rid of mouse colonies, you may decide to hire a professional, who will spread bait and pick up remains over a contracted period of time.

But poison methods aren't necessary, and they are ecologically harmful. Poisons can be eaten by animals other than the pest; Sprays and liquids soak into the soil, poisoning the ground around your home. And with new technology, poison is yesterday's news.

The mouse in your house can be convinced to move on by the use of an intelligent product built to disturb, distress and disorient rodents and insects alike. High-frequency ultrasonic and electromagnetic pulses (like the scream of a diving hawk that paralyzes prey) create a noise unheard by humans, cats and dogs but intolerable to mice, rats and insects. Electromagnetic devices have the advantage in that they send the pulses through your house wiring (without harming electronic equipment), so even the walls resonate with the sound. The pests simply leave.