I used to keep my bird seed sack in the shed until the mice found it and split it open. I then put it in a plastic bucket with a lid. That pretty much kept them out.
Except
after the winter I went out to put the last of the feed into the bird feeder and there in the bottom of the bucket was one dead mouse, fat and smiling, but quite deceased.
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I refuse to be called "Godless" just because I don't call the Great Spirit by the same name as they do. I am Godful! God-filled! I am a bloody Twinkie and God is my creamy filling, fer god's sake. Same God, different name.
Alpaca
Toadfish and Admin
OWL
Posts: 1612
CORONA ZAP!
Blue Canary in the Outlet by the Light Switch
Warm and Fuzzies: 70
We have a bird feeder, and now that we've found some birdseed that doesn't go bad in Floridian conditions (I dunno how the previous one managed it, but it did), the birds have been gobbling that stuff up in insane quantities. We're planning to get a second "arm" with another feeder, because right now, when the bigger ones want to eat, they drive the little ones away first.
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There is a pleasure sure to being mad That only madmen know. --John Dryden
anthrobabe
Guardian Toadfish
OWL
Posts: 2899
at the sound of the tone, please leave a message..
deja moo-- the feeling that you've heard this bull before
Warm and Fuzzies: 158
Critters in the seed...... (and yes mice are cute-but don't need in things)
There is a reason for saving (hoarding) some of the crap I hoard.
Large gallon size glass jars with screw type lids-- they are hard to come by around here anylonger-- all plastic now it seems. People were like - 'do you really need all of these jars' --- yes I do. One use for them (if you can get them), put the birdseed or whatever you want in them, screw on that lid very tightly and nothing will get in (well except for racoons and some squirrels)-- so be sure and put some nice hot powdered chili pepper in your birdseed-- it doesn't bother the birds at all but most racoons and squirrels do not like spicy food and will leave it alone. (notice I say most squirrels and racoons-- not all).
Hippy Schnauzer--- sounds like a super hero!
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Saucy Gert Pettigrew at your service, head ale wench, ships captain, mayorial candidate, anthropologist, flirtation specialist.
Fantastic advise as usual. Caught the mouse eating the bird seed again last night...shot him.
Only joking...is it possible the mouse is nibbling my young plants in the potting shed as well...a vegetarian mouse? Only the lower leaves are being eaten and it doesn't look like snail damage.
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She was only the Lighthouse Keeper's daughter, but she never went out at night
"White-footed or deer mice, the common wild mice of much of the midwest, are "opportunistic omnivores," according to The Mammals of Illinois. That means they eat almost anything they can find, including seeds, insects and insect larvae, and leaves and other plant parts."
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I refuse to be called "Godless" just because I don't call the Great Spirit by the same name as they do. I am Godful! God-filled! I am a bloody Twinkie and God is my creamy filling, fer god's sake. Same God, different name.