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  1. #1
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    Default There's a moose loose in the hoose

    I’ve got some mice in the house. I know where they are. Under the kitchen cupboards somewhere. I see them squeezing through the tiny gap between the wall and the cupboard, near the skirting.

    Ripping the kitchen out and replacing it is a project way down the road. At this point, I just don’t want them coming inside. I presume there’s a hole in the brickwork somewhere behind the cupboards. Possibly along a hole made for a water pipe or drain.

    My plan is to screw a sheet of aluminium (the 3mm strips you get from hardware stores) or a strip of sheet steel onto both ends of the cupboard to close off the gap between the back edge of the cupboards and the wall. The walls are painted bricks. The metal will hopefully remove most of the gap. It will, of course, leave a tiny space where the brickie smoothed off the mortar when the bricks were laid. I’m not sure whether they’d be able to squeeze through that gap, but I know they’re capable of getting through some amazingly tiny gaps. I was thinking of sealing that gap too, but with what?

    An ordinary sealer like silicon might be too soft. They may be able to eat through it. I need something that will set hard.

    Any ideas?

  2. #2
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    Default

    Don't know if it's correct, but a pest controller once told me that rats won't chew through expanding foam and it's about the only thing they won't chew through. Seems odd as it's so soft. If rats can't get through it then mice should be even less able to.

    Would be awkward to use on such small gaps but liberal use of masking tape should make it workable on your side of the holes.

  3. #3
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    Default

    Perhaps it's the taste of the stuff.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
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    Melbourne
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by 419 View Post
    Don't know if it's correct, but a pest controller once told me that rats won't chew through expanding foam and it's about the only thing they won't chew through. Seems odd as it's so soft. If rats can't get through it then mice should be even less able to.

    Would be awkward to use on such small gaps but liberal use of masking tape should make it workable on your side of the holes.
    Sorry, that’s crap Rats will go through foam, we used some expanding foam once too stop the buggers , it didn’t work.
    The aluminium idea sounds good.

    Cheers Matt.

  5. #5
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ErrolFlynn View Post
    It will, of course, leave a tiny space where the brickie smoothed off the mortar when the bricks were laid. I’m not sure whether they’d be able to squeeze through that gap, but I know they’re capable of getting through some amazingly tiny gaps. I was thinking of sealing that gap too, but with what?
    Why not scribe the aluminium sheet against the brick wall and cut it to fit the mortar gaps? Doesn't have to be millimetre perfect to block the mice.

  6. #6
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    Nov 2017
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    Melbourne
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Simplicity View Post
    Sorry, that’s crap Rats will go through foam, we used some expanding foam once too stop the buggers , it didn’t work.
    That fits with common sense.

  7. #7
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by 419 View Post
    Why not scribe the aluminium sheet
    That would be perfect, and I like it, but I doubt my ability to cut it properly. The strip of metal will have to run from the floor, over the skirting and all the way up the side of the cabinet until it's under the bench top. I'd be cutting material from the aluminium where the bricks run to allow the metal to slip into the gaps where to mortar is.

    Another idea that occurred to me was to use angle rather than a strip of flat aluminium. Though, it runs the risk of looking messy if the wall and cabinet are not at 90-deg to one another. What the angle could do that the flat would have trouble with, is support more filler material jammed into the gaps between the bricks.

    And in terms of filler, I have some grout left over from some tiling work. Grout sets pretty hard. So, long as it doesn't fall out (don't know how well grout sticks to paint or aluminium) I doubt any mouse would be able to chew it with much success.

  8. #8
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ErrolFlynn View Post
    And in terms of filler, I have some grout left over from some tiling work. Grout sets pretty hard. So, long as it doesn't fall out (don't know how well grout sticks to paint or aluminium) I doubt any mouse would be able to chew it with much success.
    Grout should stick to aluminium angle, as it sticks to alumininium and anodised tile trim.

    Builder's bog would also work.

  9. #9
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    Apr 2006
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    Hobart
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ErrolFlynn View Post
    Perhaps it's the taste of the stuff.
    Ratsak is easier.

  10. #10
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    Default

    Possibly, but there's a preference for them to be discouraged. If we deny access to food and water they'll go somewhere else.

    There's also the notion that poisons are cruel. Starving to death can't be pleasant. Some poisons cause internal bleeding. Then there's the possibility they will find a place to die and be eaten by the local wildlife which in turn die.

    Sure, it might well come to that, but softer options come first.

  11. #11
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    Apr 2011
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    se Melbourne
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    Default

    Try using steel wool to fill any gaps.

  12. #12
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    Default

    That's not a bad idea. And I could hold it in place by squirting in some Selleys No More Gaps. That could be easy.

  13. #13
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    Jun 2010
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    SW Victoria
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Handyjack View Post
    Try using steel wool to fill any gaps.
    This is the answer. They hate the stuff, gets stuck and cuts between their teeth. 100%

  14. #14
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    Feb 2023
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    Finger Lakes Area, Central New York State, USA
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    Default

    I believe the only material known to stop mice / rats is steel wool. Foam will not stop them or even slow them down.
    calabrese55

    from a google search
    Mice have unbelievably sharp teeth, but they're no match for the power of steel wool. Its texture and weave are too difficult for them to gnaw through, and it's also abrasive to their mouth and gums. When these unwanted house guests encounter a space blocked with steel wool, they'll go the other way.

    https://kapturepest.com/how-to-use-steel-wool-to-keep-mice-out-of-your-house/#:text=Mice%20have%20unbelievably%20sharp%20teeth,ll%20go%20the%20other%20way.

    How to Use Steel Wool for Pest Control - YouTube

    Preventing Mice with Caulking & Steel Wool - YouTube

    KEEP MICE OUT! The CORRECT way to use STEEL WOOL to eliminate mouse problems inside your house. - YouTube

  15. #15
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    Maroochydore
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ErrolFlynn View Post
    Possibly, but there's a preference for them to be discouraged. If we deny access to food and water they'll go somewhere else.

    There's also the notion that poisons are cruel. Starving to death can't be pleasant. Some poisons cause internal bleeding. Then there's the possibility they will find a place to die and be eaten by the local wildlife which in turn die.

    Sure, it might well come to that, but softer options come first.
    You won't be saying that when they chew through water pipes/wires like I have seen, not to mention the damage a slow, not able to be seen, water leak causes.
    Like a complete floating floor that was, well, floating. Very expensive replacement.
    We get rats at this time of year, but we leave one bait in the garage where we can see it all year round, and a week ago it disappeared so since then we have been placing 2 rat sak baits a night and every night they are either gone or have been chewed, with rat krap left behind.
    What scares me is they can get into the engines of the cars and start chewing wires etc and that would be way more expensive than the rat sak.
    In fact that is how I first noticed the rat droppings on the plenum on the engine

    Many years ago I placed a 60mm dia ball of lead over a hole in the concrete which rats had made, and 3 weeks later when I removed the ball, the rats had been chewing it, so in reality they will chew anything in their way.

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