Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage

   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #52  
My understanding is that as the mouse metabolizes the poison it kills the mouse but is also converted to a substance that will not harm a cat if the cat were to eat the mouse.

Oh, if only that were true. Unfortunately it is not. Rodenticide is spreading through the entire food chain, even deep in the forests (because of illicit marijuana grows). It's been found in everything, insects (which feed on the dead rodents) to Owls, Hawks, and Pacific Fishers.

Poison NEVER simply kills the target; there is always some dispersal and unintended effect.

Exclusion and repellent are the best and most effective methods. Seal up the structure, and put repellent in the tractors, and set traps to catch what gets in anyway.

Remember there is an inexhaustible supply of new rodents out there, so trapping and poisoning at best give you a temporary reprieve. Likewise for predator control - cats, owls, etc - they will reduce the population but never eliminate it (that would be like eating the seed corn).
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #53  
That's easy. Leave some large standing dead trees in your woods. Owls will nest there.

This is the best advice in the whole thread. Standing dead trees are essential for a huge number of birds, most of which are beneficial. (Several species of owls among them)
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #54  
My owls have a perfect spot behind my house, a couple limbs were broken off this tree during a storm a few years back but you can also build a nesting box. Just google owl nesting box and there are lots of plans, owls will nest in just about anything.
A water source will also help attract them, mine use a cattle trough near the barn.
Cosmo Treee.JPG
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #55  
I have changed my ways and do not like any method that causes suffering of the animals. I have had excellent luck with bagged moth balls from Lowes; do not recall the brand. While clearing my homestead beginning in early 2013 and to completion of my metal shop building in the spring of 2017, my tractor sat outside in the woods under a car cover and my UTV sat in similar conditions for over a year. We do have mice but they were kept at bay with a few of the bagged moth balls in strategic locations inside each vehicle. Now these vehicles are kept pretty secure in the shop building but bags of moth balls are still used :).
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #56  
This is the best advice in the whole thread. Standing dead trees are essential for a huge number of birds, most of which are beneficial. (Several species of owls among them)

X2. I cut down a dead for a long time 50' tree for firewood and there weren't any branches for nesting or perching. When it hit the ground I saw 2 baby cranes about 2 foot from a big hole in the side of the tree They were about 8" long. Not a good day for me.:mad:
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #57  
My owls have a perfect spot behind my house, a couple limbs were broken off this tree during a storm a few years back but you can also build a nesting box. Just google owl nesting box and there are lots of plans, owls will nest in just about anything.
A water source will also help attract them, mine use a cattle trough near the barn.
View attachment 559985

So true, a water source will attract wildlife sometimes more than even food. This was one reason I put in the small ponds in the ravine.

Bird houses are a great way to attract various birds to your property. Birds eat bugs, grubs, spiders, and all sorts of garden pests, plus being pretty to hear and see. Farmers used to put up swallow houses for a reason. Bats and flying squirrels will eat insects all night long.

In the 5 years I've been here, I've tried to restore some kind of balance to the land, in various ways (versus former owner who mowed every square inch and shot everything that moved, even doves). Now the critters come in droves (actually my skunks come when I call :) ) Haven't even had to set my humane mouse traps in a couple of years, but I remain wary.

I guess the point is, nature when left somewhat alone, will balance itself.
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #58  
X2. I cut down a dead for a long time 50' tree for firewood and there weren't any branches for nesting or perching. When it hit the ground I saw 2 baby cranes about 2 foot from a big hole in the side of the tree They were about 8" long. Not a good day for me.:mad:

Bless your heart....I know we're taught to tame everything, remove everything in the landscape that isn't as neat and tidy as our living rooms. In the first year there was a standing dead tree quite prominent as you enter the property, and without thinking I cut it down. Out ran a family of voles. There it lay and there it still lays. Looks fine.

I had a magnificent pine, must have been 100 feet tall, 6 foot diameter, and I don't know how old, broke in half during a severe ice storm. Broke my heart too. I had a couple of guys that came every day for the first couple of years to do various chores, including quite a bit of clearing out fallen dead stuff in just the one area around the ponds that I wanted to "civilize." They were itching to clear that thing out; the huge fallen piece and the 30-foot-tall standing piece. They couldn't understand why I wanted to leave it. I said cut off all the small branches but leave the rest. Makes me happy to think of the critters that will make their homes there.

I also have a fallen hollow red pine trunk in the woods which during the winter when I like to walk around to see all the tracks in the snow, I realized a bunny was using the trunk as a safe pathway from its burrow to the creek. So that stays too. :)
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #59  
I have changed my ways and do not like any method that causes suffering of the animals.

Bless your heart too. I work in animal rescue, including mostly wild animals, and I've seen many a hunter find a baby squirrel, raise it, and lay down his guns forever.

(I need to state here for the record (esp on an all-guy forum) that I am not anti-hunting. In fact, I wish everyone had to hunt for their meat. They would appreciate it more, respect it more. And the animals get to live a natural, free life until they are killed.)
 
   / Preventing Rodent Damage During Tractor Storage #60  
I struggle with this problem and its effects on tractors and, worse yet, my truck.

Peppermint: does seem to help. I buy concentrated oil of peppermint, dilute with H20 and spray under the hood, on every piece of fabric and wherever else I think the little buggers might try to hibernate. I would say this helps and I find the peppermint aroma to be pleasant.

I also invested in the ultrasonic pest repelling devices and if I know the truck will be parked a while, I put one of the devices on the end of an extension cord and put it right under the hood. I also put the devices in about every outlet in the barn. I know that consumer groups don稚 give them much respect but in my main barn, I see hardly any rodents and these ultrasonic doohickeys must play some part in that.

My new tractor will have to winter in the pole barn and I値l def keep the area under the hood pepperminted up and I値l use a repeller, too. Better safe than sorry. Oh yeah, I also welcome neighbor and feral cats to the barn. One good cat is worth a gallon of peppermint and a truckload of ultrasonic anything痴.
 

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