Full Revelations of a Professional Rat-catcher eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Full Revelations of a Professional Rat-catcher.

Full Revelations of a Professional Rat-catcher eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Full Revelations of a Professional Rat-catcher.

Now to deal with the different methods of catching Rats.  The best way, in my opinion, is,

TRAPPING THEM WITH STEEL SPRING TRAPS.

Whenever you are trapping, never on any consideration put bait on the traps; always put traps in their runs, but you will find Rats are so cunning that in time, after a few have been caught, they will jump over the traps, and then you must try another way.  A good one is the following, viz.:—­Get a bag of fine, clean sawdust, and mix with it about one-sixth its weight of oatmeal.  Obtain the sawdust fresh from under the saw, without bits of stick in, as these would be liable to get into the teeth of the trap and stop them from closing.  Where you see the runs put a handful in say about 30 different places, every night, just dropping the sawdust and meal out of your hands in little heaps.  That means 30 different heaps.  Do this for four nights, and you will see each morning that the sawdust is all spread about.  Now for four more nights you must bury a set trap under every heap of sawdust.  Thus you will have 30 traps, on each of which there is a square centre plate; you must level the sawdust over the plate with a bit of stick, and set each trap as fine as you can on the catch spring, so that the weight of a mouse would set it off.  They will play in the sawdust as usual, and you will have Rats in almost every trap.  You will find that this plan will capture a great many of the Rodents.  I have trapped as many as 114 in one night in this way.

In time, however, the Rats will cease to go near sawdust.  Then you must procure a bag of fine soot from any chimney sweep, and you will find that they will go at the soot just as keen as they did in the first instance at the sawdust.  When they get tired of soot (which they will in time) you must procure some soft tissue paper and cut it fine, and use that in the same way as the sawdust and the soot.  You can also use light chaff or hay seeds with the like result.

I must not omit to tell my readers to always trap Rats in the night, and to go very quietly about it, for if you make much noise they will give over feeding.  You must not go about with too big a light whilst trapping.  You should stay at the building from dark until midnight, and every time a Rat is caught in the trap you should go with a bull’s eye lamp, take it out of the trap or kill it, and then set the trap again, as you have the chance of another Rat in the same trap.  From experience I can say that you need not stay in any place after 12 o’clock at night, as I think that the first feed is the best, and that the first three hours are worth all the other part of the night.  You can go home at 12 o’clock, and be sure to be in the place by 6 or 7 a.m., for many a Rat caught in the trap by the front leg will, if it gets time, eat off its leg and get away again, and they are very cunning to catch afterwards.

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Full Revelations of a Professional Rat-catcher from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.