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  • #1 6858377
    mulek
    Level 26  
    Hello, I have a question, has any of the users dealt with electronic mouse repellers, etc?
    Such devices can be found on a well-known auction site. I would be ready to buy something like this, but how effective is it?
    Thank you in advance for any suggestions.
    Włodek
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  • #2 6858392
    Anonymous
    Level 1  
  • #3 6862225
    mulek
    Level 26  
    Thanks to gromleon, I won't be investing in something that doesn't work. I must admit that I have a little trouble with mice and something like that would help me a lot.
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  • #4 6862307
    Anonymous
    Anonymous  
  • #5 6864639
    mulek
    Level 26  
    Eh, I already have a cat, but it's hard for him to get to them, because the mice they are plucking have found their place under the floor between the joists. Though take and gas the whole house ;)
  • #6 6864774
    Urgon
    Level 38  
    AVE ...

    Gassing is a bad idea - then you want to dive under the floor to dig up the corpse?
    Better buy 100 mousetraps and 3 kilos of cheese in bulk ...
  • #7 6865752
    mulek
    Level 26  
    Well, I didn't think about it, I poured some poison through the chink and it has been quiet for a few days, but is it for a long time?
    The poison has some kind of anti-decay measure in it, so tearing the floor off can be put off for now.
  • #8 6867308
    luke666
    Level 33  
    mulek wrote:
    The poison has some kind of anti-decay measure in it, so tearing the floor off can be put off for now.

    Are you 100% sure that the agent will work?
  • #9 6868025
    Anonymous
    Level 1  
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  • #10 6868069
    mulek
    Level 26  
    I also just heard that after taking the poison, rodents embalmed like Lenin in the mausoleum :) So I guess you can poison.
  • #11 6868094
    niutat
    Level 36  
    You can poison, such agents bind water from the body of mice, and bacteria have nothing to grow on. However, I would recommend proven measures because the treatment of dead mice cannot be repeated.
    Ps
    These electronic deterrents work a bit on the mice they are about to introduce. Those that are at home quickly get used to such sounds.
  • #12 6873319
    gadulec22
    Level 2  
    I have such a miracle and it works.
  • #13 6873400
    niutat
    Level 36  
    gadulec22 wrote:
    I have such a miracle and it works.

    It works if it is turned on properly earlier, but as I wrote, you will not scare away domestic mice.
  • #14 6875582
    mulek
    Level 26  
    So I understand that such a miracle can be used on tenants planning to move in? How it's working ? It plugs into the socket and now, do you have to arrange them somehow?
  • #15 6876712
    pawel01
    Level 24  
    You turn it on and it works. I also had a problem with mice and I still have a problem because I have plaster walls and mice are walking inside, only you can hear something humming in these walls and they made a hole and the cat in action. These scarers don't always work, and established mice won't run away.
  • #16 6876839
    radpat0695
    Level 11  
    Hello,
    Colleagues, the best way is a special paste for mice and rats, I checked 1000% and it is more effective than cats and paws combined (I have been using it myself for several years and I do not know what the problem with mice is). You put it in the place where the mice come in and you have peace. If it falls, it dries up nicely and nothing stinks. I can not give the name because I buy it in bulk by weight in a company that deals with combating such pests (I give them such a small competition because I also dealt with fighting for services) :D
  • #17 6876973
    Urgon
    Level 38  
    AVE ...

    You just reminded me of a certain song, one fragment to be precise:
    Quote:
    (...) Only sometimes a gloomy voice
    calls out rat ointment loudly
    the era of pushups and bikes
    books files, halberds, świczki
    jet cars, passenger planes
    cobalt bombs and rat ointment.

    I take such a rat by its front paws
    And we put ointment on it.
    You can do it, and you can do it differently.
    The next day the rat feels unwell
    On the third day the rat is ready.
    And who will deny me?
    having such a rat in his hand
    he cannot be knocked on the head with a hammer.


    Seriously, I have never had problems with mice. Even once they got out of the breeding terrarium (for snake food), a classic trap like "automatic drooping" and some cheese to encourage them were enough ...
    Alternatively, you can still take the cat. But not a purebred, but an ordinary leprechaun, who still has a killing instinct. Healthy, ecological, natural and (as they say on KUL) God's ...
  • #18 6877456
    Futrzaczek
    VIP Meritorious for electroda.pl
    Quote:
    the classic "automatic karkoprzetrącacz" trap and a bit of cheese as an incentive was enough ...

    After a few days, you wouldn't touch the cheese yourself ;)
    The crust of two or three days old bread is the best. Carve a 10 x 10 x 5 mm cube out of it and put it on a pin in a trap. You have to be careful not to touch the bait or the paws too hard - mice have a good sense of smell and can feel a human.

    For mice, a furry animal is the best - even one from my avatar. One sunny morning I come out of the shack and see six field mice lined up in a row of mice, each with a bitten through the neck. Cats have a head :D
  • #19 6878305
    mulek
    Level 26  
    The point is that I have a cat, I have a cat as I need it and I am hunted as little as possible, but the mice are under the floor between the joists and Zenek (my cat) cannot get to them. Today I poured poison through the crack to these little bastards, we'll see what the results will be.
  • #20 6878483
    Hokoczu
    Level 18  
    A good way to get mice is a hedgehog, a creature 1000 times better than a cat, cleaned the basement, attic, garage. My mice were also under the floor, but in addition I had to put panels and paneling on the wall and ceiling. It's unimaginable how those little damn things cut the polystyrene and chase themselves up the ceiling. I dumped the polystyrene, put glass wool around the floor, so that it would never go under the panels again. Under the floor I poured poison under the floor, I had no heart to put Boris (hedgehog) there, it worked.
  • #21 6894371
    pawel01
    Level 24  
    but they eat glass wool martens because they run around in my attic and at night it is annoying because you can't sleep, and a hunted cat and one who is hungry will exterminate these mice.
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  • #22 6897271
    mulek
    Level 26  
    Hello, I have not heard the mice for a few days, after the treatment, silence is a poison, I think they have worn out. There remains the question of mice that can move in, for example, in a month or two? Any more poisoning under the floor? In stock? You could also try this electronic repeller.
  • #24 6926156
    typ
    Level 11  
    mulek wrote:
    Hello, I have not heard the mice for a few days, after the treatment, silence is a poison, I think they have worn out. There remains the question of mice that can move in, for example, in a month or two? Any more poisoning under the floor? In stock? You could also try this electronic repeller.


    I poison every year. It is quiet, but only for a while, the mice always come back before winter and crawl between the joists in the ceiling. When they start racing at night and it starts to bother me, I throw in the poison and I have some rest for a while.
    After 10 years of such a "light" fight - this year I decided to fight "more". The reason is simple - I am adapting the attic to living, so I have to scare it away from the ceiling and close the ceiling with a floor at the top. I took the wool and foil from between the joists and ... I was vacuuming and whisking the wool all day ... The amount of excrement I collected would probably be enough for half a vacuum cleaner bag. The stench after discovering wool was terrible. Some pieces of wool (where they had slots) could not be put back in. Someone once told me that mice don't like wool. Strange, because I found mouse corpses folded together with some scraps of paper in wool .... After such a whole day of cleaning, I found that I had to somehow secure the house. The poison is not a good solution, although the mice were really well dried, but before they "dried up" they infected the wool with their stench. The smell the mice leave behind finally begins to seep into the house. If the house is closed for a few days - you will smell a "strange smell" upon arrival.
    After cleaning, I don't smell this stench anymore, but the most important task for me now is not to fight the mice at home, but to protect the house from mice. So I found all possible places the mice can get into and seal them. I think that's the effect. I hope.....
    Repeller - I think I'll buy it - although some say it works, others say that nothing helps - I will check and risk the PLN 100 ......
    The cat - falls off, because it will not fit ;-)
    Securing your home against mice is therefore the most important thing, because you will have to poison all the time and after some time you may smell the mice stench in the house, which I do not wish ...
    I'm sorry for too long to explain, but I'm in the fight at the moment :-) and maybe my experience will be useful to someone .....
  • #25 6927002
    Piotrek#G
    Level 27  
    I don't know how effective these electronic repellers are, but I can say, like my predecessor, that using poison in such places is good in the short term.

    We had a similar problem at home as my colleague above did. The corridor had a fibreboard ceiling attached to wooden beams supporting the ceiling, and the space was empty. A perfect place for small rodents. At times at night you did not go to sleep because you could hear them running. Putting out the poison only helped for a month or two, and it started all over again. The worst thing was that despite the "drying" agent, you could still smell a decaying corpse. The worst thing was when the room was closed for a long time. Perhaps some of the mice only ate enough poison to die, but that did not prevent them from decaying. The solution was to tear off the fibreboards and cover the beams with decorative "gutters" from the boards, thanks to which there was no room for mice. Needless to say, tearing the plates was not the most enjoyable experience, it was full of excrement, a lot of skeletons and dried mice.

    I live in an old house (about 120 years old) in the countryside, so this topic is no stranger to me.

    The best way to deal with mice is to eliminate or prevent access to a place where they can live. You can poison endlessly because some will be replaced by others, and so near Maciej.
  • #26 8187152
    pogi13
    Level 14  
    AVE ...
    I recently found a mouse in a can bitten into the cable, you can see that she is an amateur electrician :D
    she was also slightly dry :)
  • #27 9820482
    CEZAR67
    Level 11  
    I have a plant and this problem also works, but for a short time, I did not notice anything, even a mosquito flies and it was supposed to be so effective because it was double wide range, it was electric shock, maybe someone used it and how it works. Electric curtains was a mention of zero details maybe someone knows something
  • #28 10494250
    robkon3
    Level 11  
    The ointment is most effective and works against any pests. It's expensive, but it works at 1000%. You have to catch the pest, smear its belly and it disappears within 3 days. I do not want to do an advertisement, but if anyone is interested, more information is sent to the e-mail.

Topic summary

The discussion centers around the effectiveness of electronic mouse repellers. Users report mixed results, with some claiming zero efficiency, stating that established mice quickly adapt to the devices. Alternatives such as traditional traps, poisons, and even cats are suggested as more reliable methods for rodent control. Some participants mention that while electronic repellers may deter new mice, they do not work on those already present. Others share experiences with poisons and traps, emphasizing the need for proven methods to manage rodent infestations effectively. Overall, the consensus leans towards skepticism regarding the efficacy of electronic repellers.
Summary generated by the language model.
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