Anonymous wrote:We have had a pet mouse, and their pee smells like vinegar.
I was at a location the other day and I smelled that smell. It ended up being vinegar (I actually can’t remember the details lolol).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. You dna smell dropping and pee.
This. You likely aren't smelling the mice, but what they are leaving behind
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in an old house and as much steel wool as I stuff into little nooks and crannies, we still get the occasional mouse.
Especially, when neighbors do construction.
My cat is good at letting me know, because she will camp out near where she saw it.
I've used traps, they are so-so in terms of being effective.
The most effective is poison blocks. I put it out where the pets can't get it.
It takes about a week for the mice to eat it and die.
Poison is inhumane. There is a trick to snap traps. You need to create a corridor with the trap at the end, against a wall, so that the mouse can't escape when the trap is triggered and jumps under the tensile strength of the spring. Place the trap in a corner between two walls and create the third wall of the corridor with a weighted cereal box.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely. Once you have had mice and know the smell, you can recognize it instantly. A slightly musky, corn chip type smell. If you can smell them, you likely have a healthy infestation. Exclusionary tactics work best if you can find entry points; then snap traps. Avoid poison in environments shared with humans and other animals (fine for vacant homes), and glue traps which are terribly inhumane. By the way if you ever need to free an animal from a glue trap, saturate the trapped limbs in oil which will dissolve the glue.