Rats in the loft...

Stick with the peanut butter it will take the rats a week or two to get used to the traps being there , don't disturd or move anything in the attic rats suffer from newphobia once they are accustomed to the traps being there you will get them no problem.

Hoolit
 
I agree but you have to balance that with the tremendous amount of damage that rats will do if uncontrolled. In the near vicinity of where I live BOPs & Barn Owls are nevertheless thriving.
external baiting should be a last resort, in your situation trapping would be a safer option and surprisingly effective
shakey
 
external baiting should be a last resort, in your situation trapping would be a safer option and surprisingly effective
shakey
Sadly not, we get an influx of rats after harvest, after the first frosts and again at the end of the shooting season. I recommend doing the Lantra course to anyone with who has to deal with rats on a regular basis.
 
Some great advice and some not really on it imo.

Survey the property. Is it detached or terraced? Look for air bricks, vents, water outlets and pipework. Especially kitchen area. Include the drains. Bait the drains with wax blocks on string. The bait I use turns the droppings blue.

Correct ID. Use a motion sensor or check droppings.

Use a UV dust or gel on known runs both in the loft and ground floor. Use the UV torch to trace back to entry points.

Check the garden perimeter and sheds for runs. Does the neighbouring fences show clear evidence of a run.

Are the neighbours feeding the birds with a dozen feeders. Keeping chickens. Feeding badgers and foxes etc. All will bring the rats to your door.

Have a bacon buttie. Enjoy the bacon and bait snap traps with bacon fat and peanut butter. Don't put poison down internally.

There are real issues with the drains and rodents where I live. Look for silt and stone within the drains. Do you have an extension or any new utilities. Look for a uncapped redundant pipe.

Best of luck
 
If you are going to use the normal type of trap for mice, it's best to nail them onto a bigger bit of wood or, as stated above, there's a good possibility that an "undead" mouse will drag the trap away. I had a rake of three on a 2 foot piece of spare wood and over a couple of months, in a barn where we stored wheat for the pheasants, caught 60 plus. Lost about 4 traps until I screwed them down. Where a mouse got caught with some of it's body over the bait, it's mates gnawed it until they got to the bait. Charming creatures.
 
Found Fen mk4 to work the best both inside the loft and outside in tunnels suitably protected from other wildlife and pets. No baiting and no handling without gloves on. Just in a bottle neck in their run so they have to cross it eventually. They only do it once!
 
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