Drip baby girl
Active member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2024
- Messages
- 36
- Reaction score
- 7
wow
A rat triggered my motion sensor lights and I saw it snooping around my cages . Are you getting poop buildup in your cages with the new wire?
I tried traps and bait stations but I'm now convinced that for my area exclusion is the only option.I feel your pain @eco2pia, I've had atrocious rat problems these last few months too. Saw them running inside my cages, vertically from one floor to the next story up. I'm beat how they got through the floors, as there is a layer of solid plywood between them and they're reasonably well rat proofed in that they can't run up the legs (legs of cages are in set about 100mm all around, rats can't run upside down). Thankfully it happened in the summer time when I didn't have any young litters, only dry adults, but I eventually set bait stations underneath/ between the cages (basically inside, below the floor) as well as outside the rabbitry. The rats have eaten through most things they could and there were days where we would replace the bait every 24 hours. We have regular cat visits too, so we don't normally have a problem with rats. May I suggest that you set a bait trap inside your rabbitry in a secluded spot that your other animals won't be able to get to - maybe put a bait station on top of you cages, and make it small enough for just a rat and not your quails to access.
All the best with eradication, good luck!
People litter box train their pet rabbits in the home, why not in this environment? I see text and videos about scraping, scrubbing, even using flamethrowers to sanitize the cage bottoms.May I suggest a "litter box"? Thanks to instinct, even adult buns might immediately take to a box of straw put in the poop corner. This will be easier to clean than the cage floor. . . .
sadly I have 6 bait stations with this exact brand. they ignore it. My rats must be picky?We battled the Rats for three months or so this year. THANKFULLY we did not lose any kits. They would run above cages attached to the back wall.and hung in front by chains. we would find rat droppings in the feeders and food bowls. I caught one in a large snap trap before all the others learned. I tried the pail of water with the teeter totter lid to no avail. not one catch. I had to take the tin off of the back wall and blast the nests with high press water. Every time I would get them running the Dog would catch them. This went on for months. I finally made poison bait traps out of old Tupperware containers or the cheap ones from lunch meat containers. mounted to old tote lids. screwed the bait down to rafters where the dog could not reach and on the hay storage on the back of the barn. They took the bait for three or so weeks and finally they were gone. The dog gets one every now and then when I lift the floor off her dog coop. We used TomCat bait chunx. All weather bait from Rural King farm supply. That stuff works but you must keep it in the traps and keep destroying nest where you can. GOOD LUCK to all.
I do think this will be easier for poop, but I was thinking that for pee it might be easier for it to fall thru. I think that is the reason that people do not use them in large operations--I do not have a large operation so this is a reasonable solution....tho my rabbits might just throw them around like toys.May I suggest a "litter box"? Thanks to instinct, even adult buns might immediately take to a box of straw put in the poop corner. This will be easier to clean than the cage floor.
Get something large enough for them to lay on, with a mesh bottom -or at least a drain of some kind to keep it from getting too wet. Fill it with an inch thick of straw, and if it's tall enough to fit more straw you can add a layer when the poops pile up (extending the time before you need to change it). Even if they don't take to litter training, the soft place to perch will help prevent sore hocks.
Learn from my and my daughter's folly, though, always use box that is big enough for adults: we started off with ice cream pails for recently weaned kits, and her favorite lil guy is now fully grown and hates pooping in anything other than his ice cream pail. Even offering him a larger litter box, he will stomp and grunt and whine until he gets his pail back. We even tried putting in both to get him used to it, he would only poop in the pail.
For the ice cream pails, with holes poked in the Bottom, the urine does build up; our fussy lil guy needs his pail changed every other week.I do think this will be easier for poop, but I was thinking that for pee it might be easier for it to fall thru. I think that is the reason that people do not use them in large operations--I do not have a large operation so this is a reasonable solution....tho my rabbits might just throw them around like toys.
This is a perfect solution. Thanks!For the ice cream pails, with holes poked in the Bottom, the urine does build up; our fussy lil guy needs his pail changed every other week.
However I've used egg baskets (the wire ones) they have damp spots at times, but most of it goes right through. As long as you add straw once the poops start to build up it stays pretty dry. (The poops become the absorbent factor, not the straw). The downside is the wire mesh is wide and leaks straw out the sides. I'm intending to make some solid wall wood boxes with mesh bottom to fix that issue.
Dang!
Just set all 5 snap traps I could find, there is only one kit left from the last, 1 week old litter of 4 . I want to keep a doeling from this doe, she's 5 now and time is running out. Going to rebreed her in two weeks.
I made wooden nest boxes with 1/4 inch hardware cloth on the bottom, and I put a layer of straw on the bottom. I call them nest boxes but even my buck has one. None seem to pee in them although I do find the occasional poop. I leave them in all the time, occasionally refresh the straw, and clean them well before kindling. The rabbits love them and I think it gives them a sense of security to be able to run to their box if something spooks them. In the really cold part of winter I stuff them with straw and they will burrow into them and it keeps them warm. Other times of the year they love to lay on top. Obviously keep it away from your rabbits favorite potty corner. That generally will keep them from using it for that purpose.For the ice cream pails, with holes poked in the Bottom, the urine does build up; our fussy lil guy needs his pail changed every other week.
However I've used egg baskets (the wire ones) they have damp spots at times, but most of it goes right through. As long as you add straw once the poops start to build up it stays pretty dry. (The poops become the absorbent factor, not the straw). The downside is the wire mesh is wide and leaks straw out the sides. I'm intending to make some solid wall wood boxes with mesh bottom to fix that issue.
What a nice structure! Clean, neat and tidy with no place for rats to hide. I'm so sorry you're having such a problem with them.My cages are fixed to wooden walls, rather like GIANT hutches. I have posted this picture elsewhere, but this is the basic configuration.
The rabbit spaces are (4) 2ft x 5ft cages, with the back bank enclosed by solid walls and opening from the back. 2x4 wire is buried but is too big to keep rats out--it was intended to keep dogs out and is effective for that. I simply could not afford to enclose the entire structure in half inch hardware cloth, and the Ex objected to its appearance. However, I CAN enclose the rabbit spaces in hardware cloth, and I am inclined to potentially do the same to the rest of the structure now that I have full creative control.
There is one addition since this picture, a solar powered "chicken door" in the front of the wire that allows the chickens and the ducks a wider range during the day and closes them in at night.
View attachment 40453
Enter your email address to join: