The mouse has returned (a new mouse, of course); and the efforts to catch and kill it are ascending to new heights, or descending to new lows, depending on your perspective. Although the low-tech, non-violent approach was successful last time, the new mouse visitor appears to be notably brighter than his deceased predecessor and he (or likely she) has thus far thwarted every mouse-catching effort. My husband has tried a combination of sticky traps, traditional spring-release traps, and a variety of bait. The space underneath the kitchen sink is now nearly spotless, having been thoroughly cleaned, and it's also a virtual killing field for mice. However, we continue to see evidence that the mouse has been able to gnaw its way through the door-mounted garbage bag that hangs on the inside of the cabinet door and to then enjoy a late-night buffet.
So my husband bought an electronic mouse trap, which I promise is a real, manufactured item, available for sale at Home Depot and other retailers, for an obscene and ridiculous price. Well, it’s $40, but $40 for a mousetrap is absurdly expensive. Even as he bought the silly thing, he was almost sure that it wouldn’t work, but he was determined to at least try it. Meanwhile, he rigged the traps and the garbage bag in a way that appeared virtually mouse-proof, except to the mouse, who easily picked her way around the landmines.
So now we have a night-vision deer camera. Do you think I’m kidding? I’m not. Here it is.
It's the fatigue-green plastic thing on the left. Note that there are no fewer than four mousetraps here, and those are only the ones visible. |
I didn’t even ask how much this cost, because I would rather not know, and because it wouldn't matter to my husband, who would pretty much pay any price to figure out how this stupid mouse was managing to evade his carefully constructed obstacle course of death. Last week while shopping for my son’s baseball pants, he wandered over to the hunting section at Dick’s and there it was: An infrared light deer camera, or whatever the hell technology allows you to take video of wildlife under cover of near total darkness. He was sold.
He caught some footage of the thing last night, but we could only see part of its body (not sure which is worse--the head or the tail--we could see its icky little beady-eyed face but not its revolting tail) so we know that the mouse was at large last night, but we’re still not sure how it got through the cabinet and avoided the traps. The camera has been re positioned in the hope that we’ll get footage that shows the whole sequence: Entry into the cabinet from whatever tiny hole or crevice remains open after the extensive hole-plugging efforts, dodge and weave through the minefield, mouse middle finger at the camera, trash feast, exit stage left.
Or maybe we’ll just house train the vile creature and learn to live with it. If it didn’t leave droppings behind, then I could maybe, possibly coexist with it. As long as I didn’t have to see it. Or hear it. Or maintain any conscious awareness of its existence under my roof.
Never mind: It has to get out of my house, or die. We’re going to the mattresses.
He caught some footage of the thing last night, but we could only see part of its body (not sure which is worse--the head or the tail--we could see its icky little beady-eyed face but not its revolting tail) so we know that the mouse was at large last night, but we’re still not sure how it got through the cabinet and avoided the traps. The camera has been re positioned in the hope that we’ll get footage that shows the whole sequence: Entry into the cabinet from whatever tiny hole or crevice remains open after the extensive hole-plugging efforts, dodge and weave through the minefield, mouse middle finger at the camera, trash feast, exit stage left.
Or maybe we’ll just house train the vile creature and learn to live with it. If it didn’t leave droppings behind, then I could maybe, possibly coexist with it. As long as I didn’t have to see it. Or hear it. Or maintain any conscious awareness of its existence under my roof.
Never mind: It has to get out of my house, or die. We’re going to the mattresses.
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