You've just located down in bed and are twenty minutes into Letterman when you hear it: a light scratching overhead, accompanied by a squeak here and a squeal there. You assume that it's the wind making strange noises (after all, it is windy tonight!), or perhaps the house is just settling (you do live in an older home, so it would make sense...). Maybe the sounds are just the consequent of an overactive imagination. You hope!
Of course, you just can't get colse to the positive end - you have company. whether it's a bird, a bat, a squirrel, or an whole house of mice, there's something up there. Given that you've had recurrent rodent problems, the latter choice is probably the safest bet.
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However, how can you be sure what type of animal you're dealing with - assuming that you even have unwelcome visitors at all? Before you can evict them, you need to know who "they" are.
Above all else, your first step is to search for your home for signs of mice. separate problems call for separate solutions; if your visitors are in effect squirrels instead of mice, you'll need to originate a separate strategy.
When canvassing your home, keep an eye out for these seven telltale signs:
1. Droppings and urine
Mouse droppings look like a grain of rice; they are approximately the same size, but are black in color. Mice will not ordinarily tour across open spaces, so you're more likely to find droppings along walls, pipes, and beams, as well as in storage areas and next to objects. "Urine pillars" are less common; they consist of mounds of grease, urine, and dirt. You can also use a blacklight to find individual urine droppings.
2. Chew marks
Look for tooth marks and wood shavings (similar in consistency to sawdust) colse to doors, baseboards, and cabinets. Marks on food containers can also be a clue that you have company.
3. Grease marks
When traveling alongside pipes, beams, and walls, mice may leave greasy smear marks, as dirt and oil from their fur rubs off onto the surfaces.
4. Tracks
Footprints and tail marks on dirty, dusty, or muddy surfaces can indicate activity. If you reason that mice have taken up residence in an otherwise impeccably clean area of your house, lay down a sprinkling of talc to catch them in the act.
5. Nests
Mice originate nests of shredded paper and similar debris; check attics, basements, garages, storage areas, closets, and other dark, enclosed places for nests or "stolen" materials.
6. Sounds
You're more likely to hear squeaks and squawks at night, when the house is quiet and your guests are active.
7. Sightings
It's not uncommon to see mice during the day; although they are largely nocturnal, they do move about in daylight.
Now that you're positive that you're dealing with mice, it's time to start strategizing. Your plan of strike will in effect come in three phases: first you need to clean up the messes you found; next, you must trap and issue your unwelcome visitors; and finally, you'll mouse-proof your house so they can't get back in (and wouldn't want to, even if they could!). Good luck!
How to Tell If There's a Mouse in Your House
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