โNov-15-2015 07:35 AM
โNov-17-2015 10:12 AM
โNov-17-2015 03:43 AM
โNov-16-2015 06:23 PM
Naio wrote:Probably not, she is dining on lamb chops, presently.
Westend, does your ms. kitty want to come for a visit? I have freezedried tuna :B.
โNov-16-2015 06:00 PM
โNov-16-2015 05:50 PM
Naio wrote:2oldman wrote:Grit dog wrote:That's cruel. If you'd bothered to read, we've already discussed a cat.
So without reading all 4 pages, there is a cat present in the middle of a rat infestation and the problem isn't solving itself? That cat need s to go for a swim!
Grit dog is presumably much bigger and tougher than any cat. We could lock him in the crawlspace with the rats, see if he walks his talk.westend wrote:Naio wrote:
I like the ferret idea! Not sure the owners would take the risk, though, since poison has already been sprinkled around.
I was just thinking to myself that our problem was lack of predators (coyotes, anyone?) But did not realise ferrets hunt rats!
Correct, no one is going to risk their pet ferret when poison has been spread.
The initial problem is probably not a question of predation but an abundance of available food and shelter (nesting habitat). I have one cat that brings an animal home almost every day, sometimes two. Yesterday she brought back an adult rabbit and a grey squirrel.
westend, you have an excellent cat! I had one like that on the farm -- one day she killed a ground squirrel. But, as said, the closest thing to that here is a feral tom and he is not taking on the rats. He's not as manly as Grit dog.
โNov-16-2015 02:24 PM
โNov-16-2015 12:43 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:dogs don't do so well either.
Actually, cats are good swimmers, as long as they are not INSIDE the bag! :B
โNov-16-2015 11:44 AM
โNov-16-2015 11:12 AM
โNov-16-2015 09:15 AM
โNov-16-2015 08:25 AM
โNov-16-2015 08:01 AM
westend, you have an excellent cat! I had one like that on the farm -- one day she killed a ground squirrel. But, as said, the closest thing to that here is a feral tom and he is not taking on the rats.Agreed, Ms Kitty is a stone killer! I think it starts out with predation at the litter time. Ms K brings back live samples so the kittens can sharpen their skills. She was a farm cat but is now retiring to exurbia.
โNov-16-2015 07:51 AM
2oldman wrote:Grit dog wrote:That's cruel. If you'd bothered to read, we've already discussed a cat.
So without reading all 4 pages, there is a cat present in the middle of a rat infestation and the problem isn't solving itself? That cat need s to go for a swim!
westend wrote:Naio wrote:
I like the ferret idea! Not sure the owners would take the risk, though, since poison has already been sprinkled around.
I was just thinking to myself that our problem was lack of predators (coyotes, anyone?) But did not realise ferrets hunt rats!
Correct, no one is going to risk their pet ferret when poison has been spread.
The initial problem is probably not a question of predation but an abundance of available food and shelter (nesting habitat). I have one cat that brings an animal home almost every day, sometimes two. Yesterday she brought back an adult rabbit and a grey squirrel.
โNov-16-2015 07:22 AM
Grit dog wrote:That's cruel. If you'd bothered to read, we've already discussed a cat.
So without reading all 4 pages, there is a cat present in the middle of a rat infestation and the problem isn't solving itself? That cat need s to go for a swim!