Thursday, July 18, 2024

Evil Critter Mayhem

  Seems the last two years we've had a bumper crop of tree rats .

That's this year's crop . There's at least five , possible six young ones in the nest in the maple tree in the front yard , in addition to the six from last year .

In addition to chewing on the lead flashing on the roof they seem to have developed a taste for PVC plastics . That's the conduit for the 220 volt line that goes underground to the garage under the deck . 

My solution was to wrap it in Bituthane / Ice and Water Shield in order to cover the holes they made and it seems the tree rats  don't care for the flavor or texture of rubber adhesive. 

Good enough . . .  for now .

Then this morning we spotted one chewing on the PVC sleeves over the wooden posts of the fence around an old house slab that is our back patio . 

So dissuasive measure is applied

On all posts .

Never had them before but red squirrels also seem to have made an appearance this year . The slinky trick was no obstacle for this little creep as he simply crawled up the pipe inside the slinky and made himself right at home on the bird feeder .

So I doubled up on the slinky and added a big dome in this case a repurposed aluminum disc sled from the 1970s . That seems to have done the trick . . .  for now . 

If this continues much longer more drastic measures may be in order .


9 comments:

  1. I resorted to a "squirrinator" this summer. 13 so far and I've made a dent. When I shoot one, the rest hear the report and get crafty and sly and I spend way too much time sitting out in 90+° weather so for now, some whole corn in the trap and I spend the day in (semi) comfort. The acorns will be ripe (enough for them) in a month or so and they will retreat to the woods.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Mike, that was what I was going to suggest. Of course taking that family portrait, I would followed with #7 birdshot...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey Kevin , I generally don't mind the squirrels feeding on the droppings of the bird feeder , but these guys are getting a bit out of control . 7/8ths oz of # 7 shot would do the job. Trouble is that though I am on good terms with my neighbor the cop , I am in a rather urban setting so a twelve gauge going off on the front corner of my property would get me in a bit of trouble . If I opt for the lead diet I need to use the Aguila Colibri 22s as those are about as loud as an air rifle especially out of a long barrel . My fear is a ricochet around here would likely land in someone's window . Wouldn't want that either .

      Delete
    2. He just might be tired of all the squirrels and varmints too...

      Delete
    3. He likely is but I just wouldn't want to push my luck . With my track record I'd likely make the local rag headlines if I pulled a bone headed move .

      Delete
  3. They make a .177 caliber air rifle that comes with a scope that you can buy at Academy. Dialed in for about 60 feet, head shots are guaranteed, and no down range problems are created.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I do have an old Diana model 25 springer air rifle in 22 cal that does around 450 fps. It would probably do the job too .

      Delete
  4. Aguila makes a powderless bullet. It's around 22 grains, IIRC. It's just the primer doing the shoving. It won't cycle an auto. It's so quiet I can hear the hammer fall,in a rifle. Pistol, it's not that quiet. It's got enough Oomph to bury the bullet in a 2X4 from twenty feet. My pellet gun is a lot louder than they are coming out of a rifle.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I have some of those Aguila Colibris (Humingbird in Spanish) somewhere in my stash . They are very quiet out of my Stevens 66C . But as we are in a dense environment I'd still have to be extremely careful over whats downrange .

      Delete