Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
A friend of mine was biking home after work when a huge rat jumped on his leg. He fell off and broke his leg.
WHAT?????? Your poor friend. I think I would have to leave DC
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
We might need to go there. Or bounties for skins? Does dcs animal humane laws of catch and release apply.to rats? I'm shocked that in 2019 no one has developed a way to sterilize them??? So gross. They totally play where kids play in DC - watch out for those sandboxes.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I live in Potomac. I need clean and private .
Anonymous wrote:
Are they mainly feeding on household and restaurant garbage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
It’s because we care about animal welfare. Lol. I myself use rat poison, but don’t dare tell my neighbors
I use poison and I’ve been honest with my neighbors about it because some have outdoor cats that might catch a poisoned rat. That being said if I go on Nextdoor, every rat conversation will inevitably have a bunch of people claiming poison is inhumane and illegal (which is wrong, it’s legal in bait stations). I see it on DCUM too. So it’s no surprise we can’t get the problem under control.
Rat poison is bad for most species..even humans. I am not a fan of recklessly spreading it around, unless it's controlled bait type of thing where other animals won't gain access to and would be out of reach of kids. In my area they used baits. but occasionally some squirrels also got into them enough to get poisoned and die slow painful death![]()
I was always worried about dogs being too curious, some owners don't always know what baits look like. And definitely indoor/outdoor cat owners should be worried if these are allowed in their area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
A friend of mine was biking home after work when a huge rat jumped on his leg. He fell off and broke his leg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
It’s because we care about animal welfare. Lol. I myself use rat poison, but don’t dare tell my neighbors
I use poison and I’ve been honest with my neighbors about it because some have outdoor cats that might catch a poisoned rat. That being said if I go on Nextdoor, every rat conversation will inevitably have a bunch of people claiming poison is inhumane and illegal (which is wrong, it’s legal in bait stations). I see it on DCUM too. So it’s no surprise we can’t get the problem under control.
We would cement any holes that are forming to keep rats from making nests. We would make sure our garbage containers are secure, but rats literally chew through hard plastic! We would never keep patio doors open for more than a second and had to keep an eye on little mice trying to get in. The neighbor next door did nothing, so rats took a hold near us, and no matter what we'd do, we couldn't really eliminate them entirely. It's really someone that city needs lead instead of leaving this to individual homeowners. Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
Maybe release all these poor cats from shelter cages and let them live and do what cats do: kill rodents. They are already neutered. Obviously, lack of any predators and abundance of food scraps would only lead to it being more and more rats. What do we expect? Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
It’s because we care about animal welfare. Lol. I myself use rat poison, but don’t dare tell my neighbors