9 Ways To Deal With Rats (warning: lots of footage of rats, living and dead)

2024 ж. 29 Сәу.
483 478 Рет қаралды

Rats are a common pest issue in gardens, allotments, farms or anywhere food is grown or compost is made. How to deal with them, or not, is a controversial topic, but I have found a method that has been really successful in my context, thought it is not ideal.
0:00 A Controversial Topic
1:07 1. Tolerate
2:43 2. Don't Attract
4:06 3. Exclude
5:19 4. Trap
6:45 5. Poison
7:59 6. Predators
9:19 7. Hunters
10:30 8. Compost Trap
11:40 9. Asphyxiate
12:43 The Method I Use
14:43 Finding Something That Works
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  • My cat watched your video with great interest! Shame age has reduced her hunting abilities, but she'd like more films with rats. :)

    @johnharrison1743@johnharrison1743 Жыл бұрын
    • Haha! An unexpected audience!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • Love this reply!! 👍

      @gegalvezge@gegalvezge4 күн бұрын
  • A fascinating episode, the progression of methods is a sight to behold, well done.

    @obliquusfasciculare9963@obliquusfasciculare9963 Жыл бұрын
    • Glad you appreciated it.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for your honest and considered communication and approach on this sensitive subject.

    @markgerth9115@markgerth9115 Жыл бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Honestly, I think the fire torch is the most elegant solution. I’d say to keep up with it for every 2 weeks because that’s when the newborns begin to open their eyes and walk. Sure, animal suffering sucks but diseases and crop damage are no joke

    @rephaelreyes8552@rephaelreyes8552 Жыл бұрын
    • I try to check at least every two weeks, as you say. To be able to kill the young in the nests before they start to walk. I think this has been the most effective part of the method, to kill the next generation. With the traps, and predators that kill some of the adults, the young might still be raised by others in the colony, and then end up as adults that need to be killed. Even if a few adults escape every time I asphyxiate a nest, at least I have stopped that generation from appearing. I don't like the idea of killing the babies, but it is better than having them starve or struggle, and a lot better than the damage that they can do.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • My neighbor has a rat terrier. Has caught 12 rats in one day. Specialized rat hunting dog has made a huge difference in our neighborhood. The feral cats get a few, but mostly the dog keeps them under control. The rats are very smart and it is hard to trap them. Chickens and the feed that go with them is the main source of rats in our town.

    @kegelcompare@kegelcompare Жыл бұрын
    • Jack Russell's are great for killing rats, as are most terriers. A cat may kill the rat which piques its interest, or for food if feral. But those dogs are hardwired to do this job. I used to go ratting round farms, and factories with my father, and our Jack Russell's as a kid. Even the scent of a rat, or burrow will get those dogs hyped up. We even had a few who would go off hunting on their own, then sit at our backdoor with a few mice or rats laid out waiting on my father. Chest pushed out and all proud of themselves. Basically showing off what they had killed the night before. One bitch would even defend them if anybody apart from my father tried to depose of them. She was leaving them for him to see. Oh, and get praised for it.

      @theressomelovelyfilthdownh4329@theressomelovelyfilthdownh4329 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, terriers can be great hunters, and in some contexts they can be a really effective way to rapidly reduce the rat population. What often seems to happen is the rat population builds up to a really problematic level, and then a bunch of terriers are brought in to kill as many as possible at one time. Cats seem to be better at the gradual, continual process of keeping the population low. I have shifted to the method of tying to never let the population of rats to get too established. I had a bad experience when my neighbour brought their terrier up for a hunt, and it ended up making a real mess of things, and damaging plants in the gardens while chasing down rats. To me it seems a lot easier, less mess, and just as effective to asphyxiate the nests.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • I agree I think a ratting terrier is almost the kindest and quickest way to get rid of rats. If you have someone in your area who has such a dog. We have to give up the poison, it kills owls and all sorts of other animals.

      @helenswan705@helenswan705 Жыл бұрын
    • After I try nearly 99% of products/methods on the market, I design one of the best traps in the world. HOPE MY R&D WORKS HELP U save tons of $ NOT trust+buy other failed products, thank me later, or get notified to buy the best one:) kzhead.info/sun/prB9osqgroaLaX0/bejne.html Show u why 99% of all traps fail including A24 b/c they have EYES ABLE TO SEE LOW-TECH PIN/NEEDLE TRIGGER MECHANISM-they're too smart, DO NOT EVEN EAT FOODS on PLASTIC BASE/PAPER LOL: kzhead.info/sun/iZiphLd-ioCfe58/bejne.html bonus: 1) kzhead.info/sun/ftlshq6Laoh_gI0/bejne.html 2) kzhead.info/sun/jK2vndGugXOYh5s/bejne.html 3) kzhead.info/sun/nbuqfL2NcJGViI0/bejne.html 4) kzhead.info/sun/hZiKedOunKBnaX0/bejne.html NOTICE one day 1 trap can kill 8, it all depends on how often u reset the trap (remove dead body + reset in secs) & how often they come in and take food from the trap: 5) kzhead.info/sun/o7JsYLujfmOVbKc/bejne.html

      @alexl932@alexl932 Жыл бұрын
    • I just tossed a wounded rat into the chicken pen for a few days in a row.

      @cody481@cody4819 ай бұрын
  • My favorite method of asphyxiation is to use road side signal flares. I do this during times the soil is moist. Find 2-3 rat holes in the nest, and start each flare, then stick each flare down in one of the holes. This is very successful at killing the whole rat colony. I use plaster and baking soda baits, and a live trap that comes with a fitted tub, which can be used to drown the rats. Another alternative if you have one in the area, is a terrier club. The club is where terrier owners get together with their dogs, and go to farms needing rat control. The terriers are very effective at killing rats.

    @permiebird937@permiebird937 Жыл бұрын
    • The flare is an interesting on, probably does the same thing as the torch. I have had one terrier on the site to help with a nest, and it made a lot of mess, and ended up chasing the rats through the gardens and damaging a vegetables. I won’t be doing that again, at least not with my current setup. Go larger farms with lots of space around, a pack of dogs like that would work well. I find it a lot easier to simply asphyxiate the nests, without any mess to clean up, and I don’t have to organise anything with anyone else.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • That cat just eating next to the rat at the end had me cracking up. I have a couple of cats like that. You really have to get pure barn cats if you want them to be hunters in this context. We adopted two kittens from a barn cat mama and they are the best hunters I've ever seen. Nothing gets away from them. The other ones that came from the shelter, they can't be bothered. It's a toy to them, not food.

    @tinab7791@tinab7791 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, I have noticed that cats raised in a barn seem to be the best hunters.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • I have noticed in the previous rat videos, the very same cat was also pictured on camera with rats. I am not saying they are working together, but i am interested in the ongoing saga between the kitty and the rat population at RedGardens. Cheers. 😉

      @michaelsoltesz3779@michaelsoltesz3779 Жыл бұрын
  • So complete! It was enlightening to see you go through all these methods in an order of effectiveness in some sense. Thanks so much.

    @richm5889@richm5889 Жыл бұрын
  • Nice work, brother. Always appreciate your thorough research and patient explanations. Be well

    @healthyrootsstrongwings538@healthyrootsstrongwings538 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • I appreciate your concern for their potential suffering. I've spent 25+ years rescuing domestic pet rats and agree that they are social and intelligent creatures but I also draw firm distinctions along the spectrum of wild to domestic pet. I recently moved to a new area and I know we have voles, mice, rabbits, and deer at the very least. I would not be surprised if there are also rats. I am grateful to find such a thoughtful video on ways to handle wild rat issues. I'm definitely not looking forward to possibly having to deal with this but I'm glad to see you've tried many options - most of which wouldn't really work for me for the same reasons they don't seem to work for you: suffering and collateral damage.

    @MischiefAndMore@MischiefAndMore Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for that reassuring comment. I am always a bit nervous talking about these issues, partially because I also really like rats - a few people close to me have pet rats that I like spending time with. So it is good to know that other people appreciate the challenge this brings to dealing with wild rats. My own journey involved me deciding that if I was going to be killing them, I should not shy away from the potential brutality of it, to avoid developing a detachment from what was really happening. That was an 'interesting' phase to go through, and I am glad I no longer have the direct connection. Seeing very young rats running around outside the nest after the adults were killed, really cemented the idea for me that it was better to kill the full nest, even if some of the adults did escape.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • Wild rats give me the heebejeebies. No problem with spiders. I have a Chihuahua now in my suburban home. He's the best method I've found against them. Only desperate babies have attempted to take up residence. I found a burrow at the far end of my garden and am aware of several hedgehogs in and around my garden. Seeing the skin of a slug by the entrance convinced me that the burrow belongs to a Hog. Seeing the nibbled food in this video reassures me the rats have good alternative options in the area. Asphyxiation is a good method. Using CO2 would cause them to fall asleep before even a headache sets in and they simply wouldn't wake up. On the same level as taking a dying pet to the vet. It also means you only have to dispose of dead bodies. I already have a weed wand. Should it be necessary, I know what to do now.

      @michellebyrom6551@michellebyrom6551 Жыл бұрын
    • As another pet rat lover, I too appreciate the considerations and kindness involved in this video.

      @Hana-su7zg@Hana-su7zg Жыл бұрын
    • I feel truly sorry for you

      @not.likely@not.likely8 ай бұрын
    • OUTSTANDING CONTENT‼️For anyone dealing with rats, you OWE it to yourself to watch this well thought out video❗️

      @Sunnytrailrunner@Sunnytrailrunner8 ай бұрын
  • The Gas flamer seems to be the best option. The borax/flour or plaster not a bad supplementary action.

    @rickthelian2215@rickthelian2215 Жыл бұрын
    • I think a combination of the two would work well.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Most ticks are from mice and rats, not deer as most think. I have no problem with eradicating them. Lyme disease is no joke.

    @4everhdt@4everhdt Жыл бұрын
    • I didn't know that.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • Chickens eat ticks too. Certain species of lizards help kill Lyme disease in ticks when the ticks feed on the lizard's blood.

      @janinawaz4596@janinawaz4596 Жыл бұрын
    • Ticks are everywhere were animals go.. 🤷‍♀️ Even cats & dogs have them.. There are tablets for the dogs that will eliminate ticks for about 3 months... Best natural prevent for one self, dogs or cats, is to do rosemary water.. Put dried or fresh rosemary in 1 liter of boild water. Let sit until cooled off. Strain & pour in spray bottle.. Spray every day, before go out.. 👍 In case got tick, take alcohol, kind that is used for hands, & apply a lot on the tic.. It will die quickly & will be easy to remove even with fingers. Get colloidal silver, & drink (1 cap in 1 litre of preferable drink, as water, juice, etc). Cs kills bacteria & virus. That way You'll get protected from lyme disease. Blessings 🙏🕊️🌟

      @helengren9349@helengren934910 ай бұрын
    • Lyme disease is too large of an issue here in North Carolina to allow rats to be part of our ecosystem.

      @ross-smithfamily6317@ross-smithfamily63174 ай бұрын
  • Nice to see a fact based video about this topic. Our normal rat population is 0 despite the fact that I can see fields in every direction. Because after rule 2a do not attract them with food you forgot to mention rule 2b: do not attract them with space to live (the advice to wrap nets and tarps around slats and boards to store them under tension and un-cushy, remember?) To catch rodents my tool of choice is a frankfurter style shovel. the needed amount of "cruelness" comes easy after bed after bed has been eaten empty. rat? dang! vole? dang! mole? not dang. We live inside a village and we only had rats a handful of times in my 51 years. Most times the reason was inappropriate animal food storage (at our chickens malfuntioning food dispenser, at the neighbor's rabbits, at the other neighbor's pigeon stables). It is very important to talk to the neighbors, just to recognize the source of the problem. The neighbor with the pigeons was 80+ lived frugal and had second hand plastic buckets from milking machine washing powder as grain containers. Problem 1: cracks which have been widened by the rats, problem 2: he was too weak to pull of the lid if closed properly, so the lid only was laying on top. Solution: we bought him stackable metal hobbocks cheaply from ebay, cleaned the grain and moved it to the new containers. And we did a group action to lift the pigeon stable to empty the nests below it. four people, two dogs, many spectators :) The hobbocks were cheaper than 2-3 bottles of those blue rat poison sachets would have been. so my advice is: depending on the size of your ground you do not have the problem alone, work with the neighbors, and help them. also some things can be really cheap: perchs attached to the roof rafters at the gable cost almost nothing. and they are empty most of the times. but in the morning hours there is a falcon having his break there and if he only gets one mouse or baby rat snack every week it is worth it.

    @peter2327@peter2327 Жыл бұрын
    • Not giving them a place to live in is good advice, and I could be a lot better at that. Or at least restricting access to areas I don't want them to nest, so that the only accessible nesting place is the compost pile. I would love to attract more of the birds to help with the job, but I garden beside a huge colony of rooks and jackdaws the chase any hawk or buzzard away! I tick this is one of the reasons there has been spot many rats in this area, as there are rarely predators in the sky. I can see the birds hunt 200m away, but not in this area.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • The fact you have cared enough to try to make it as ethical as you can is more than most people do. You will probably get the extreme side who think you should not kill/maintain any of them but I think your conscious should be clear. Good video.

    @Callofdootie@Callofdootie Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for the comment. I guess I am trying to bring people along who might be very opposed to killing. And also it is part of a natural refinement, to continue to improve. Although I am reasonably content with killing the rats, and had found an effective way to do it, it can still be improved.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Wow, Very informative, excellent explanation of your problem and solutions you have tried and tested. Thank you.

    @donatoforte2833@donatoforte283310 ай бұрын
  • At last, a calmly expressed, well-evidenced video about this problem. Rats are worthy opponents - in our case they have done thousands of pounds worth of damage. I'll adapt your suggestions to our context. Thanks.

    @TryThinkingAboutIt@TryThinkingAboutIt8 ай бұрын
    • Glad you appreciate my video, and hope some of the methods work for you.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • An affective method used in rural and urban areas are putting up owl posts for them to sit and watch for any prey, so just a fence post for them to perch on.

    @ndixon8241@ndixon8241 Жыл бұрын
    • We have a few of those, but I don't know how many owls actually visit.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Great comprehensive video with outstanding explanations and footage! Thank you!

    @robburton3255@robburton32552 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for all ur time and all the good ideas.

    @glomontero6011@glomontero6011 Жыл бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Nicely done video for a subject that is indeed very sensitive to some. Although in my experience, having your crops decimated by "pests" wakes up the "survivalist/hunter" even in the more "sensitive type" of human beings.

    @timobreumelhof88@timobreumelhof88 Жыл бұрын
    • Having pests damage the crops definitely changes things for a lot of people. It changed me quite a bit, and I have also seen that transition the transition you mention with people who have worked with me. As is often the case, opinions often change when they meet with the realities of the world of growing/gardening.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • @@REDGardens yes. I also changed a lot when we .moved from the city to the countryside (I was 14 at the time,)

      @timobreumelhof88@timobreumelhof88 Жыл бұрын
    • Amen brother. I was all peace/love until they decimated all my plants and moved in under the house.

      @B30pt87@B30pt879 ай бұрын
  • I am a 75 year old organic gardener . Yes rats and mice are an ongoing problem and somee of the experience is the same as yours . I like your real life account of the rat problem ❤ this year all the gooseberries and red currants were taken by mice . And all that after spending time and money on bird netting . Good luck from Ireland 😂

    @hansstofberg43@hansstofberg437 ай бұрын
    • They can be such a problematic pest!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens7 ай бұрын
  • thanks for sharing as always your content is of great help!

    @laurenceblanchette7177@laurenceblanchette7177 Жыл бұрын
    • Glad it was helpful!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • We have a feral cat colony in our community garden. Not very many of them actually kill rats, but their presence and smell keeps them away (mostly). I always say the cats are part of the compost system. But occasionally when we have a thick pocket of dry materials in the bottom of the compost bin, a rat will nest in there. A good soaking of the area with water laced with a lot of mint essential oils usually gets them out.

    @kittencollective@kittencollective Жыл бұрын
    • As Bruce says, cats destroy all other wildlife, so are no kind of answer

      @FireflyOnTheMoon@FireflyOnTheMoon Жыл бұрын
    • Cats are a relatively very easy way to keep rats, and a lot of the other wildlife out of the gardens.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • @@REDGardens Working cats works for us in our NYC community garden (other NYC gardens have given up composting because of rats) the rats have plenty of other places to go. The feral cats are here anyhow, we TNR all those that wander into the garden and provide them with shelters and food. I can see how its not going to work for your situation.

      @kittencollective@kittencollective Жыл бұрын
    • @@kittencollective Cats in an urban community garden make so much sense, especially as they can offer an added bonus for people who go to the gardens! Now I am thinking how lovely it would be to have a feline companion up in the gardens! 😀 But I guess I will have to be content with the robins.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • Most aren't very good company. They watch me from afar and look judgemental whenever I talk to them. But a few let me pet them when its feeding time.

      @kittencollective@kittencollective Жыл бұрын
  • This is the best advise on eliminating rats. I got rid of my backyard rats with the torch. Used dry ice and never worked , at $3 a pound, it simply costed too much to get enough. Probably just spent total $3 on the propane used if not less. But this torch is very powerful, and may ignite things nearby so use with caution. In addition, it took me a while to get the ignition, by that time, the rat hole was filled with propane, and a loud explosion can be heard and slightly shook the ground. Be extremely careful.

    @lhy2000@lhy2000 Жыл бұрын
  • The greenhouse allotment I garden at had a severe rat/mice problem the past couple of years, I was using mouse traps at first but found the large rats would set them off but avoid being caught. they also caught several birds which was unfortunate, so we ended up getting a few semi feral cats which has been very productive so far

    @henrydunne3051@henrydunne3051 Жыл бұрын
    • Semi feral cats seem to be a necessary part of allotment areas, and community gardens.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Great video! You put a lot of effort into them!

    @GardensforLife@GardensforLife6 ай бұрын
  • Your A24 automatic trap should be more effective if it isn't around food sources. Place it along a known travel route, instead. Snap-traps are far more effective when they're housed inside tunnels/trap boxes. Rats can only face traps head-on this way, which eliminates the problem that a lot of snap-traps have, which is the ability of rats to eat or steal bait from the sides, where it's usually easier. Rats are killed humanely at the front of traps, because that's where the maximum amount of force is delivered. Inside tunnels, injured rats can't drag traps away, and scavengers can't drag traps away with rats in them. Using good traps is important, of course. T-Rex/Tomcat traps are really good, as are the metallic traps made by Made2Catch. In an area where they have access to an abundance of vegetables, using flesh and/or fat baits should be the most effective.

    @Willowflat16@Willowflat1610 ай бұрын
  • Do you just give baking soda or is it a mixture? Please give more details on the mix. I've also heard of boric acid powder being used, but on the other hand they say it is too small qty to kill

    @mtnj8599@mtnj85998 ай бұрын
    • I mixed baking soda with sugar and flour, but I can't remember the specific recipe (available with a quick google). Apparently the baking soda reacts with the stomach acid and causes them to bloat which kills them. Not sure how well it works, but it definitely leads to a fair amount of suffering, which is why I don't use it much any more.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for such a very informative and well presented video about a problem most of us will share. You explain all the alternatives very well indeed and the pictures are amazing! I am confused about where you are situated. Your accent does not sound 'British English' - especially the word 'compost'. But the local countryside, the familiar weeds around, and the fox all suggest the UK. I have found raised rotary composting to be the most effective in preventing rat occupation, and also asist the fastest degradation. I also grow carrots and beetroot in deep containers on inverted metal school tables suspended from the roof of the polytunnel. But they do have to be quite high as these beasts are surprisingly clever at getting to where there is a good smell of a tasty food source!

    @biopoweruk@biopoweruk8 ай бұрын
    • Thanks! I am based in Ireland, and have lived here for a few decades, but grew up in Canada, so a mixed accent. Interesting ideas for preventing rat damage.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • I discovered your KZhead channel today, and I've watched half-a-dozen. I'm in California, and I haven't had problems with rats in my garden as of yet, but I just recently started to have problems with gophers, even in my 18" high raised beds. Thirty plus years of gardening, and this is the first time gophers have invaded. I know what I have to do! I will be deterring them by removing the soil from the raised bed, lining the bottom with hardware cloth, and then returning the soil to the boxes. I've been very impressed with your experiments and reporting. All of your posts have been very thoughtful. I'm looking forward to watching more.

    @susanriggs8896@susanriggs8896 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks, glad you found my channel. And hope you have some success with keeping the gophers out!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Top best videos ever. Easy, simple great explanation.

    @lvnmykdz@lvnmykdz9 ай бұрын
  • There are two approaches to using cats. One says to keep them hungry other that a well fed cat will have more energy to hunt. We had a huge rat problem and got one small cat. She is very well fed the garden area is large with lots of burrows for them she managed to control the population within a few months and it has been down every since now going on two years.

    @ravityanay@ravityanay Жыл бұрын
    • Sounds like a good ratter. Interesting point about the two approaches.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you. This was quite informative.

    @B30pt87@B30pt879 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing your experience! Very interesting.

    @thiemokellner1893@thiemokellner18933 ай бұрын
  • Very sound advice thank you for showing it God bless you and catch you down the trail

    @harlandcollins8235@harlandcollins82358 ай бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • My uncle worked in a scutch mill in the 50s which was overrun with rats. The workers caught one and kept it caged for a week During that time they blocked all holes the rats used and then painted the captive rat with tar and released it down the last hole which was blocked off too. About a fortnight later the hole was unblocked. The tarred rat emerged. Tarring the rat meant the others, cut off from food, could not smell its approach. As the only food available was other rats, it became the mill exterminator. There was no further issue with rats as long as the ill operated.

    @GeneMcKinney-vq5mo@GeneMcKinney-vq5mo8 ай бұрын
    • Interesting approach!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for document such a wonderful approach! Recognising that wanting to eliminate one's own suffering does not require enforcing that suffering onto another being, is something I think people often miss. I've said this before, but honestly, your videos are such a tremendous resource to Irish gardening and sustainability. There's nothing else like it.

    @JamCamel@JamCamel Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks you!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Plaster of paris and dry porridge mixed 50/50. They ate it all and now gone.

    @vimy385@vimy38511 ай бұрын
  • Thanks Bruce

    @FireflyOnTheMoon@FireflyOnTheMoon Жыл бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Great advice thanks. In Australia I have Goanna lizards and the occasional Python snake, that can smell out rat nests.

    @georgegibson707@georgegibson707 Жыл бұрын
    • Predators like that would really help! No snakes in Ireland unfortunately.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • I have a great mouser… 14 y.o. Domestic short hair black cat… I live in a farm house and the farmer ( who keeps chickens for egg production) is grateful for her abilities😬. Really thoughtful discussion about challenges… if only politicians and ‘activists’ would follow the same rational thought processes rather than trying to shout down alternate opinion…😢

    @Aidan-tu4un@Aidan-tu4un4 ай бұрын
  • I am glad to see you taking on this controversial topic. I am wandering if in further development of your methods the following options could be investigated? Could natural deterents work as an additional method. I am thinking of perennial onions or other smells that could discourage them. Maybe animal smells like dog excrement or synthetic pig hormones could be used as well. Secondly I am wondering if designated fox borrowing areas could be useful. I imagine a designated zone that is fenced off, where shrubs and trees grow completely undisturbed. Finally I am wondering if gasses could be sourced elsewhere. I live in the city near the highest point of the area. I speculate methane could be harvested here because it's lighter than air. In the lower areas of the city sewers probably contain more hydrogen sulfide. I think we produce a lot of toxic gas that can be used one way or another. I am always very hesitant about the use of rare gases like argon. I am super impressed by the methods you put in place. Directing the rats to designated locations is very impressive. Thank you for your many years of shared experience on this channel!

    @juliendesmet9423@juliendesmet9423 Жыл бұрын
    • I have heard that people can have success with natural deterrents to keep the rats out of particular areas. I am not sure it if would work with trying to keep them away from a food source, but it would be an interesting thing to explore. I think one of the issues with foxes, and other predators, is that the rat population level that would be needed to keep a fox happy enough to stay in the area, is likely higher than what us humans would find acceptable. on our site, there are loads of places for a fox to make a den, and quite safe and reasonably secluded, but I am not sure why they have not moved in when we had loads of rats around.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Very Informative, thank you. In my small garden i tolerate them 🙂 my compost is in bins but since i have backyard chickens....i put away all feed containers at night but feed that falls to the ground and doesnt get eaten up is impossible to clean up. Its all the burrows that are a worry, sometimes the tunnels collapse and leave large holes all over the place. Am thinking of what to do about that, for now i just refill them.

    @shylapia@shylapia Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, rats seem to always be around when people have chickens.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • I've seen it recommended to cover your greens (food scraps) with browns so they are less likely to attract pests.

    @pagevpetty@pagevpetty8 ай бұрын
    • It might help with some pests, but I have found rats will burrow deep into a pile.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • So a bunch of researchers did a study against chickens dogs and cats and discovered the chickens are actually the best hunters and they're the best to keep around your garden to keep other Critters out but you do have to keep them away from your vegetables cuz they will tear things up

    @Algorithmicgeneratedwordsalad@Algorithmicgeneratedwordsalad Жыл бұрын
  • I would see if anyone has any jack russell terriers in yourcarea.. they dig holes really well and are built for ratting and going down small burrows... it's what they're bred for....

    @cew9837@cew9837 Жыл бұрын
    • I have worked with a Jack Russel once (which I didn't mention it in the video), and the dog caused a real mess of the area, damaged a bunch of plants in the gardens when chasing a rat, and even missed a few rats. I won't be doing that again! 🙂 I find asphyxiating the nests a hell of a lot easier, and less messy, and I don't need to organise anything with anyone else.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • I don't fancy a dog digging up my veg plot or hurtling around near my hens... unless they'd grown up happily together. I have thought of it though... I'd be concerned for the dog on my plot too, it's a danger zone! I'd love a rough-coated Jack Russell for non-rat related reasons.

      @VanderlyndenJengold@VanderlyndenJengold Жыл бұрын
    • @@REDGardens mm they can be really difficult. One of ours was quite vicious when in a mood. Guess gassing is quite quick.

      @cew9837@cew9837 Жыл бұрын
    • @@cew9837 Yeah. If you like having dogs, and have the space for a breed like that, and they can do a bit of rat hunting occasionally, great.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • I'm not sure you actually watched the video

      @FireflyOnTheMoon@FireflyOnTheMoon Жыл бұрын
  • Using the gas method, do you then dig through your compost to remove the bodies or do you leave them & allow the bodies to break down in the compost?

    @L_Martin@L_Martin14 күн бұрын
  • VERY informative, THANK YOU!

    @phyllisadellesherer531@phyllisadellesherer5318 ай бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • Any tips for an attic rat council won't do anything , I tried wooden traps an cage, peanut butter bait

    @kehoe210@kehoe2107 ай бұрын
    • Sorry, I don’t have experience with rats in buildings.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens7 ай бұрын
  • With your flame torch, is there concern for unburnt chemicals being deposited into the compost? I heard this was a problem for farms near very busy highways bac in the day (that could also be an old wives' tale).

    @Mastadex@Mastadex Жыл бұрын
    • I think that propane is a fairly clean burning fuel, but there could be some potentially harmful unburnt residues, or smoke from the material in the hole that was burning. I don't know what effect this would have, if any on the compost, but I suspect it would be minor. The issue with farms near roadways is (or was) mainly based off of leaded fuel, and other impurities in the oil, and breakdown of rubber tires.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • I was thinking that too, but a shallow dive suggests that even though propane may have contaminants of methane, butane, propylene (another 3 carbon molecule) etc, the combustion of all of these consists of CO2, CO, H2O, elemental carbon - so I think it's not a significant concern.

      @misterdubity3073@misterdubity3073 Жыл бұрын
  • Very good stuff, Bruce. The criticism is often based on POV's from other scenarios. They are indeed not specifically attracted to certain things. I agree with tolerate, but it's important in my environment to consider what their population would have been if we were not here (as humans). Dog food, feed, compost, bbq's, chickens, rabbits... we give them an opportunity to quickly increase way beyond what would be a natural population in the area. This is where we have a responsibility to control their numbers respectfully, for their own good, ours and other animals. On the manner of dispatch, I agree that humane/instant termination is the way to go.

    @SimpleEarthSelfReliance@SimpleEarthSelfReliance Жыл бұрын
    • Good point, I agree. The 'natural' population of rats would be really low without humans.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Excellent video. I don't have the ability to attract rats to a compost pile and most of them live in neighbor's houses anyways. So I mounted a thermal gun site to my pellet gun! I have found the Sig Sauer MPX offers repeated shots without reloading (30) or cocking. One night about every other month or two I clean up all the rats I can find outside. When I first started doing this I would kill around 20. Now it is down to 3-4.

    @kirkwilson5905@kirkwilson59058 ай бұрын
    • Useful advice for those who are interested in that type of approach.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • Good one! Maybe jam the exhaust pipe from a pump, generator, or mower into the compost heap rat holes?

    @nevillegoddard4966@nevillegoddard496611 ай бұрын
  • very thorough and watchable..thanks

    @danevans5359@danevans53599 ай бұрын
  • I think if I had a recurring issue to deal with I would keep ferrets and terriers. If you keep the ferrets at the allotment and clean the cage out into the compose heaps, or even scatter it in the hedge rows then the scent would act as deterrent.

    @paulgibbons2320@paulgibbons2320 Жыл бұрын
    • I have heard other people have had good success with dogs, but I haven't talked to anyone who has actually used ferrets. That tends to be an animal service you hire in.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • @@REDGardens good pets to keep if you do it DIY. No more expensive than keeping a rabbit.

      @paulgibbons2320@paulgibbons2320 Жыл бұрын
    • Yup ferrets are great for pest control my house had a mice problem, my wife loved ferrets so we got a de scented one… I don’t want to know what a fully scented ferret smells like lol. But yeah I let it go in the house it was gone for an entire day and I found dead mice everywhere. So after a good clean up the house is mouse free. Now if only I could bring it to the garage lol but it would escape and never come back I bet

      @whosaidthat5236@whosaidthat52367 ай бұрын
    • When I kept ferrets I left one to roam around part of someones house that rats were running around in thinking if it didn't catch any the scent would deter them. Didn't work. Same with a wood pile at anothers place.

      @michaelcaffery5038@michaelcaffery50384 ай бұрын
  • I had rats almost completely kill some plants we grow for our business and have found deterring them from coming into the shade tunnel works better than trapping or poisoning. We've had a massive rat plague in Australia for the last few years, predators are only just starting to catch up to the population change. The neighbours have outside cats but that hasn't really slowed the rats at all. I have several inside cats who use bentonite clay litter trays which I put in little piles around the shade house near the rat holes and they haven't been back since. If they think a cat is passing by they might just come in and out but if they think the cats live in the shade house from the smell of the urine filled clay they don't come back at all. We are thinking of using big wheeled bins for composting food from now on to reduce the amount of food they can get from us, but I have not tried the clay on the vegie patch yet because it might contaminate things. I might try keeping it in a pot instead of piling it up loose.

    @niamhfox9559@niamhfox9559 Жыл бұрын
    • Putting the litter boxes in the tunnels makes sense.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • Ooh, that's a good idea! My cat usually goes outside but if I keep him in overnight he'll sometimes pee in the box. Or I could go over to the neighbor's and confirm her suspicion that I'm crazy by asking her if I can have some of her cat's used litter.

      @B30pt87@B30pt879 ай бұрын
  • Good vlog I’m thinking about moving to a property that was once a rendering plant where I know there’s a big rat population Sounds great right 😊 Thinking about starting a cat refuge or maybe Jack Russell’s to keep them at bay

    @russelljenkins4660@russelljenkins46608 ай бұрын
    • A cat refuge sounds like a good option! 😁

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • I found your channel when looking for a way to deal with rats which was to Tolerate them, I had never thought of that and I tried it but rats aren't tolerated by neighbours or the council so I now use the gas torch method which works best as there must be a good amount of Carbon Monoxide which is much more effective than either CO2 or Argon as it is preferentially metabolised; a concentration of ~2% is fatal rather than 10%+ needed for non toxic gasses.

    @drdjnorg@drdjnorg Жыл бұрын
  • I built several electric traps! I placed several metal poles in the ground where the rats had their borrows! When it rained or I use the hose to soak the area, then I crank up the power through step-up transformers! A couple of discharges and everything is dead,

    @jamesmeredith381@jamesmeredith3818 ай бұрын
    • That would kill a lot!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • I found using the baking soda mix was very effective for my farm. I posted a couple videos on it. The key though is to remove as much food source as possible so they are more apt to eat the mix. I eliminated the majority of my rats with the mix and use the ratinator to maintain low numbers.

    @OleYankeeFarm@OleYankeeFarm Жыл бұрын
  • I loooove the way you talk! Thanks for such good info!

    @nancyramirez5167@nancyramirez51676 ай бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens6 ай бұрын
  • i wonder, do you just put the rats back in the compost pile to add to said composts nutrients? i wonder if doing so would introduce disease perhaps? how do you deal with the waste bodies?

    @DeathMonky22@DeathMonky22 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, the rats go back into the compost, and I don’t worry about any disease lasting through the decomposition process.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Great advice I'm sick of these rats getting into my loft and chewing my wiring

    @AdultshopitCoUk@AdultshopitCoUk6 ай бұрын
    • Hope you can get rid of them!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens6 ай бұрын
    • @@REDGardens Thanks

      @AdultshopitCoUk@AdultshopitCoUk6 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing this information with us. I really enjoyed your videos.

    @sheliadean9548@sheliadean9548 Жыл бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you, this was helpful

    @juha7830@juha7830 Жыл бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Great video Bruce. 🐀💚

    @cloughjordanwood-firedbake7996@cloughjordanwood-firedbake7996 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks Joe!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Does laying down a few pipes under the compost pile give them set entryways. Make asphyxiating them a quicker task. Let them repopulate the maze and hit em again.

    @olympia007@olympia0079 ай бұрын
  • Unfortunately, rat bait poisons, disables, and kills the animals who eat rats too, like foxes and owls. I think your attract and asphyxiate method is admirable, in situations where the rats need to be controlled.

    @janinawaz4596@janinawaz4596 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks. I agree with those reasons to avoid conventional poisons.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • I can’t believe that cat’s lack of regard for its job.

    @trship6274@trship62743 күн бұрын
  • Build a rat heaven, compost / nesting /feeding, bin from scrap plywood with one or two entrances/exits that can be closed off. Periodically, in line with rat gestation period cover and seal off and gas them. You could run a pipe from a gallon can containing some crushed coal which you could heat with your torch and they would just go to sleep permanently. Repeat at appropriately times Just a thought, Love your channel, and looking forward to your growing year.

    @ThePmloc@ThePmloc Жыл бұрын
  • I don't know if anyone has mentioned this, but CO² buildup causes considerable stress in all respiratory animals, because CO² detection is a primary function necessary for survival. In cases of suffocation or asphyxiation, it's not the lack of oxygen that is sensed, it's the buildup of CO². Nitrogen is inert, undetectable, and would cause asphyxiation without the animals even being aware that it's happening. I assume that argon would work in a similar fashion. Nitrogen makes up 78% of our air, so it makes sense that 100% feels no different. Argon is the 3rd most common gas, but it's less than 1% of the air. Either way, if you are concerned with humane extermination, don't use CO². It's essentially the difference between getting drowsy and taking a nap, or being smothered by a pillow. Also, a little nitrogen in the soil is never a bad thing.

    @LeesChannel@LeesChannel14 күн бұрын
    • Yeah, if I had an easy supply I would probably use nitrogen. But, personally, I am not concerned enough about the suffering to go too much out of my way or spend too much money to get the Nitrogen. But a very useful option for others who are more concerned and have easier access to supplies.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens13 күн бұрын
  • I find it odd that the comments recommend dogs, cats, sealed compost bins etc when Bruce clearly explains in the video his reasons for not choosing these options.

    @FireflyOnTheMoon@FireflyOnTheMoon Жыл бұрын
    • I guess most people reply from their context not necessarily Bruce's context.

      @timobreumelhof88@timobreumelhof88 Жыл бұрын
    • And a lot of people use the comments to share with other people, not to necessarily tell me what to do.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Have you tried filling the burrows with gas, then blocking up entrances apart from one, then igniting from one remaining entrance? Good for voles, might be good for rats too, it should collapse the tunnels.

    @badWithComputer@badWithComputer Жыл бұрын
    • I had seen that done for voles, and seen a few videos of exploding earth! Would be fun to try!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • @@REDGardens My neighbor had one of those rodentator contraptions for his ranch. It mixed propane and oxygen and had a piezo ignitor. you would simply not believe how loud the explosions were. Perfectly acceptable in the American Southwest but I doubt it would fly in Europe.

      @TobiasDuncan@TobiasDuncan Жыл бұрын
  • 10. A stern talking to!

    @gregbluefinstudios4658@gregbluefinstudios4658 Жыл бұрын
    • Haha

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • for us here, Argon is much more expensive than CO2. I am a birder, and really avoid Poison at all costs, to keep hawks, and other raptors safe from secondary kill.

      @gregbluefinstudios4658@gregbluefinstudios4658 Жыл бұрын
  • We have been suffering badly from rats in recent years. The biggest problem is sweetcorn. A couple of years ago I counted eight on my sweetcorn. So not very much left for me to eat. They also dig large burrows which can be a pain since it brings up the stoney subsoil. The cold winter seems to have had a good effect and I have seen no rats since the cold snap. I have dalek compost bins with manure in them and they had been making nests on the top under the lid, and I think they like the heat from the compost. I have been finding cat pee quite effective at deterring them. My daughter uses a corn based cat litter which clumps up so you just remove the balls of pee which she saves for me. They are permanently inside so less likely to carry any diseases or infections. I tried poison but they seem immune because they kept eating it and there seemed to be no sign of less rat activity. I tried plaster of paris with dried chicken soup, but rather concerned about what happened to the rats. Seems you also need to supply water at the same time.

    @Digeroo123@Digeroo123 Жыл бұрын
    • That is tough, having rats eat your corn! I definitely want to stop that from happening as we are doing some corn trials this year. Interesting about the cat urine.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • @@REDGardens I have taken to putting a plastic bottle over each cob of corn. Need to ensure that the rain drains out of it. The rats learned to push the bottle up so need to wedge them very securely. A bit laborious but I use the same bottle in the spring to keep the plants warm.

      @Digeroo123@Digeroo123 Жыл бұрын
  • I have rats here because neighbours keep putting scraps into bins that aren't covered. I bought a large bag of ground hot chili peppers, used it around the commonly traveled areas of the rats. Squirrels, rats and even raccoons are rodents, they are averse to anything with "hot, spicy" so it deters the rats from nesting because they bring back the hot chili powder to their nests. Unfortunately I still have to use traps, but much stronger ones than shown. It's a simple set trap that's black, can actuate with a pad and definitely is quick kill. I also put hardware cloth along any ramps where the rats can hide/travel.

    @ninemoonplanet@ninemoonplanet Жыл бұрын
    • Rats don't like coffee grounds I heard it's true ,& i've had rats it's true so try sprinkling coffee grounds as a deterrent!!!

      @samilucille1@samilucille16 ай бұрын
  • Me and a friend go around farms and use a liquid bait chocolate spread and cooking oil mix so the rats have to stop and feed we dispatch them with air rifles using hollow point pellets you cant kill all of them but we keep numbers down.

    @wayneprice2737@wayneprice2737 Жыл бұрын
    • Sounds like a useful option, for those of us who like guns, and have easy access to them.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • I have a vole issue- do you? If so how do you deal with them? Thanks Bruce

    @tobruz@tobruz Жыл бұрын
    • No vole issue here, thankfully.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
    • I use juicy fruit gum

      @twofathoms1@twofathoms1 Жыл бұрын
    • I caught some voles with a standard snap trap for mice with peanut butter and seeds as bait, it was early spring so wasn't much else to eat though. Just put it on their runs.

      @lettucesalad3560@lettucesalad3560 Жыл бұрын
    • our bavarian voles can only be decimated with those traps which use blanks. you dig them in the holes, and check them daily. I use red painted bicycle spokes to mark the places where i dug them. no sweeter sound than a tiny bang at 4:50 in the morning. the other traps are always triggered, and then a new hole dug around. doesn't help.

      @peter2327@peter2327 Жыл бұрын
    • I trapped voles with apple as bait. They really really like that. I found this out when they got into some of my stored apples in the house... But usually the local farm cats keep them under control. I used the plastic "Kerbal" mouse traps that are amusingly made in the shape of a cats head. The normal kind don't work on our Vorpommern voles!

      @kirstypollock6811@kirstypollock6811 Жыл бұрын
  • i have used car exhaust on non cat petrol car's. CO2 fire extinguishers is good.. AND you can by powdered Calcium carbide. putting this in the holes will react with water and produce acetylene gass. thsi powder have ben a normal way to remove the "water vole" for a long time. i have used old CO2 fire extinguishers that is decommissioned and free and stil was full. i did manage to "blow up" a bobble on the lawn tho lol. as the turf lifted and made a bobble of some sort from the pressure i was putting down the hole.

    @grapsorz@grapsorz Жыл бұрын
  • Does growing mint or cloves around property repel rats

    @AAAA-vu7fp@AAAA-vu7fp7 ай бұрын
    • I don't know.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens6 ай бұрын
    • no

      @FireflyOnTheMoon@FireflyOnTheMoon6 ай бұрын
  • Thankyou for an excellent video. I live outside town and is very rural but a few people do moan about animals in their garden from the occasional mouse in winter, "moles" that dig in the manicured lawns and "wood pigeons" eating the fruit in late summer, "foxes" and "rats". I suggest people who have this much against the wildlife around them move to the cities. Always wash your vegetables and any other seasonal foods plus your hands and stop worrying so much. PS// Whoever is throwing plastic waste and other rubbish which is not compostable in your garden waste should have their head put in a trap 😉

    @Coastlinefx@Coastlinefx Жыл бұрын
  • Does anyone have any experience with the electric ones that electrocute them? As to whether they are effective please

    @mikeclifford7740@mikeclifford77409 ай бұрын
  • What a great solution. Respect wildlife in a proper maner.😊

    @michaelrasmussen5928@michaelrasmussen59288 ай бұрын
    • 🙂

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • Last years I had mice or rats even climb tomato plants and take a bite of **every** tomato. If they had stolen just one or two I wouldn't mind, but each one and pooping on the others is a bit much. I haven't found the perfect method for my situation yet, I just have a few square meters garden at the house, but thank you for the thoughtful overview and inspiration on this topic. I really appreciate you're trying to find the best solution to a problem without introducing lots of follow up issues (like you do in all your videos). Also, at least I can't think of a way to approach this topic in a more sensible way in a KZhead video, very well done.

    @stefanklein7500@stefanklein7500 Жыл бұрын
    • That is tough! I have seen that happen in our gardens, with the rats nibbling lots of the fruit, not just one. I thought they were sampling them, looking for a good one! Thanks for the supportive comment. Talking about this issue is a bit tough, as I don't know how people will react.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Great 👍 👍 👍 You actually did a documentary.... Very good content. Hahaha 😂. What the heck that cat, must be a conservationists.

    @artandmore575@artandmore575 Жыл бұрын
    • 🙂 That cat just wasn't interested. And the rats were not concerned at all!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • You can combine baking soda and vinegar, the chemical reaction creates a gas called carbon dioxide. Put some plastic bottles into the holes thus letting the gas escape into the nests.

    @johnsamsungs7570@johnsamsungs7570 Жыл бұрын
  • My buddy had a bird aviary in his backyard that attracted mice from nearby ivy. So he got himself a humane trap. You wound it up and when a mouse crawled through the tunnel it would get scooted into a holding cell to be released back into the wild. That trap worked great! It caught at least a mouse a day. He went on a week vacation forgetting about the trap. When he returned he checked the trap and there were bits a mice everywhere and one big fat mouse who appeared sick. (It looked wet) We called it Cannibal Lecter.

    @bassfishingwiththeantichri2921@bassfishingwiththeantichri29218 ай бұрын
    • That is weird!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
    • That's awful 😞😭 yes don't forget to check the trap!!!!!

      @samilucille1@samilucille16 ай бұрын
  • As sad as it may be, pest management is a part of growing food

    @sagopalm279@sagopalm279 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, it is.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing your experience. Right now we are dealing with a rat in the house. While I hate killing any animal (except roaches), I cannot tolerate it in my house.

    @derpywho1394@derpywho13946 ай бұрын
    • I think things change completely when they are in your house!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens6 ай бұрын
    • @@REDGardens Just yesterday we finally were able to get rid of the rat. We bought a trap that uses electric shock. It killed the rat within seconds. So we can finally breath tonight. It was expensive, but worth it.

      @derpywho1394@derpywho13946 ай бұрын
  • I deal with rats in my garden. 1 Cage traps 2. snap traps 3. A trail cam to monitor activity to know when I have a problem, and to know when things are under control. If I see Rat activity on the cam I get aggressive.. More traps and checked daily, no rats.... Less traps and checked every 3 days.

    @northyland1157@northyland1157 Жыл бұрын
  • We normally set traps for voles in the sweet potato bed. But last year we had rats for the first time. We trapped way more rats than voles. We are in an allotment also. We trapped over 35 rats, mostly young ones. I bought adult rat sized traps for this year. We did catch one house sparrow in a trap. But they are also a pest in the garden, they love pea sprouts and peck at the tomatoes for water. We take all the dead rodents and feed them to the burying beetles that live at the edge or our garden area. Natural predators are foxes, Kestrels, and Red Tailed Hawks. I am thinking of getting a rat terrier dog, as I grew up with one who was a great killer of rats and mice on the farm.

    @RJack1915@RJack1915 Жыл бұрын
  • Is keeping bees near compost a useful idea? Birdy

    @lisahodges8299@lisahodges8299 Жыл бұрын
    • I don't know. We have a few hives within 30m of the compost piles, and I don't remember seeing bees near them. The local wasp population is definitely attracted to the compost piles!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • I like to use nooski I feel like that is the quickest kill but is a bit fiddly and need to have a nice bait in it for them

    @haydene492@haydene492 Жыл бұрын
    • Looks interesting.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for being a different voice!

    @sabinehildebrandt5883@sabinehildebrandt58834 күн бұрын
  • I have Yorkies, and they love digging the rats out, and also chase them down the backyard, but don't eat them, if I command them not to 😊

    @magrietguthrie8661@magrietguthrie86618 ай бұрын
    • Some breeds of dog do seem excellent for the task!

      @REDGardens@REDGardens8 ай бұрын
  • At some point you say: there aren't enough predators around. The problem is likely that to sustain one predator it takes a stable population of many more preys. So even if there were enough predators, you'd still have more rats than you'd be comfortable with!

    @OrtoForesta@OrtoForesta Жыл бұрын
    • That is a very important point! So much is about tolerance. I find the same with hedgehogs and slugs. It takes a lot of slugs to keep a hedgehog in the area, more slugs than I am willing to have in the gardens.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • So informative! I raise dogs so poison is out of the question. In addition, I am an animal person so in general, I don't want to see any animal suffer. Thank you for so many good ideas. I realized from your video that the rats and mice I do have are pretty much under control. We have fox and feral cats on the property so seeing a rat or mouse every now and again are probably normal. Just worry about an infestation of anything. Thanks so much for taking the time to go through all of the humane options!

    @sunway2004@sunway20045 ай бұрын
  • The seemingly just one rat that eats from my compost I think helps turn the pile just as much as I do as it pulls like 3-5% of the pole out to dig a hole in and I push it around a little to fill the one entrance hole 😂. (Seemingly 1 asive only seen one at once and the hole is small and I'm assuming the neighbors cat and the skunk I saw in a neighbor's yard one late night)

    @VinegarPotato@VinegarPotato Жыл бұрын
  • Rats dont like scaffold netting so i stuff used damaged net into holes blocking them in or out. Continually destroying their homes helps them to look elsewhere

    @jensissons5709@jensissons5709 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, that would probably work. I prefer to know where they are though.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens Жыл бұрын
  • My neighbour has just landscaped his garden with a mini digger and I now have a rodent infestation. His garden had old mole tunnels, have the rats come from there do you think? Thanks.

    @marthacunningham2028@marthacunningham20285 ай бұрын
    • Sounds likely.

      @REDGardens@REDGardens5 ай бұрын
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