I've been struggling with rats in my garden for a while now. I didn't realise how much digging they could do. Where are the mangy foxes when you need them?
We have a pond that the rats seem to like.
My neighbours are very careless with their rubbish which the rats also appreciate.
I found one in our cellar over the weekend too. It seems they are exploring from a base next door.
Anybody else battling against the local plague?
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When you say 'struggling', are you actually having fisticuffs with them?
I struggle in the sense that there seems to be an infinite number of them.
They have eaten a good portion of my shed which I feel quite cross about.
Their backfill from digging filled it to a depth of about ten inches.
Yes, I live close to both but this plague is a recent development.
I wonder if the works on the Parkland Wlak may have triggered a dispersal.
Actually a rare venomous American "snub nosed" snake was captured in the allotment recently. Apparently it was thriving on the abundance of local vermin.
Are you the REAL Jeremy Fisher? This is amazing!
Can you eat rats? They say pigeons are rats with wings and they taste OK. Just a thought.
Incidentally, I wonder if rats tell each other that in London you're never more than six feet away from a human...
How bad is it to have a mouse in your kitchen?
Does it mean that there are thousands more hidden in the cupboards etc?
@ Tabbie: if you find a mouse in your kitchen, you have to change your name
the other night, i watched a lovely big rat poking around the strange hole in the ground in front of the billboards next to the cab office at the tube end of sgr. completely unafraid of looming human curiosity.
@tosscat - are you a perpetually self-pleasuring feline?
I knew someone who woke up with a mouse on her arm.
I knew someone else who woke up with a frog under his pillow. His cat had brought it in from the pond in the garden.
how do rats collapse their heads??