Monday, March 13, 2017

Learn How To Catch A Mole

By Frances Barnes


It may surprise you to find out you can go hunting in your own yard. If you know how to catch a mole, you can have the thrill and rid your garden of a pest, too. If you don't want to be so 'hands on', there are chemicals you can use, or traps, or professional animal control services. All this information can be found online.

There is one system that requires you to dig a deep hole through and underneath a tunnel. Put a 5 gallon bucket in the hole, and then restore the tunnel to a usable condition. The little animal is supposed to come along and fall in the bucket. Strange at it seems, this is said to work. You can also keep watch at dawn or dusk and hope to spot a disturbance in the tunnel. You then shove a spade into the soil and bring up the mole with the dirt. You have to grab the critter before it gets away, so you'll need thick, strong gloves.

You need to think about what to do with a live mole. It's against the rules to evict a wild animal from its habitat in many areas. Check local animal control regulations to see if you can re-home moles.

If being humane is the reason you want to catch moles alive, you'll need to prepare a good place to re-home them. You shouldn't inflict them on the neighbors, and moles don't like the woods. You need to read up on their preferred habitat and food before letting them loose. The best idea may be to let them go on your own property in a place where their activity won't bother you.

If you just want them gone, there are chemicals you can use. Poison bait is made to look like worms, which moles eat. They don't eat grain, so biscuits that work on mice or rats won't attract moles. Check the reviews for products (make sure they aren't just advertisements!) to see what works.

Traps for moles are one thing that is said to actually work. These need to be set and placed into active tunnels. Care must be taken to keep the traps underground out of the reach of children and pets.

Other things to do include putting Juicy Fruit gum or mothballs in the tunnels. The reviews are not great. You can stick a hose into a molehill and flood the breeding chamber below. Any moles flushed out will need to be caught and - whatever. Poison gas released into the tunnels is another solution. People have even tried explosives. Before trying the last method, you might want to seek professional help. Ask for a guarantee; moles are tricky.

Many gardeners settle for co-existence. Moles eat grubs and other insects without doing much damage to landscaping. Rollers can compact the soil so moles won't try to dig their tunnels. Unless the damage is extremely unsightly, it may make sense to live and let live.




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