ChatterBank2 mins ago
something alive in the attic
19 Answers
every night we hear scampering in the attic above our heads. we havent seen any evidence of mice in the rest of the house, and since there is no food in the attic, wonder what it could be. we dont think it is birds as we have had birds in the past nesting in there and this sounds different. do mice live in attics? if so, can they also get in the walls even though we have cavity wall insulation? how would they get from the attic to say the kitchen to get food? it sounds really loud like big mice or could it even be a squirrel ? has anyone else had noises in the attic from pests?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by mimmymimmy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
To be honest Naomi we could never be rid of mice living where we do. We do obviously try our hardest with the rats but even the council's pest control people say it's well nigh impossible. Rats and mice come in off the fields and the farm is only a stone's throw away. At least the rats aren't those that live in town sewers but still not nice. The field mice come in for shelter in our loft at night and in 30 years we haven't had any problems with our wires. The cat brings them in live and unharmed. I think she thinks they are her babies. We have a great time chasing mice around to try and catch them humanely.
I honestly don't live in a mouse ridden house.
I honestly don't live in a mouse ridden house.
I know what you mean, Lottie. I live in the country too with farms all around, so you can't avoid them completely, but I think you having a cat might help keep them out of your living areas. We've only had real problems with mice once, and then they got into the kitchen cupboards and munched anything they came across, they also chewed electrical wires, and they found their way up a radiator pipe and chomped straight through a brand new carpet. As much as I like animals - my garden is like a nature reserve - I wasn't amused to be sharing my house to that extent with the little critters! :o/
Incidentally, I had a cat that used to bring live mice in - and put them down to eat his dinner! :o)
Incidentally, I had a cat that used to bring live mice in - and put them down to eat his dinner! :o)
We had mice in our roof space. Trapping and humane release was not working, so we bought sonic noise generators. We hear an occasional burble, apparently the wee little chaps hear something more as they upped and offed. Sad and all that, but I don't feel that guilty, I hadn't asked them to stop by and ultimately they are a fire hazard
It cost my daghter £90 for the council ratcatcher (I'm sure has a £90 title but still a ratcatcher) to put up traps for the squillows in the attic. He got three of 'em with a huge steel trap. They haven't come back. They were gnawing at cables and stuff and they are only rats with fluffy tails no sympathy is pointless - they eat nesting chicks and anything else they can grab. They had heard lots of scrabbling about for a few weeks and the cat got VERY intrigued.
I knew someone got a squirrel in the kitchen - it got in the attic and came down the inside of the cavity walls, made a right mess before it was caught.
Birds would either be still, in the dark, or in springtime you'd hear nestlings squeaking when dinner arrives. Pigeons would make pigeon noises but you'd know it was them from the droppings and they need a largish exterior gap to get in.
I knew someone got a squirrel in the kitchen - it got in the attic and came down the inside of the cavity walls, made a right mess before it was caught.
Birds would either be still, in the dark, or in springtime you'd hear nestlings squeaking when dinner arrives. Pigeons would make pigeon noises but you'd know it was them from the droppings and they need a largish exterior gap to get in.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.