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Getting rid of squirrels in the house eaves
Posted on 10/15/17 at 5:58 am
Posted on 10/15/17 at 5:58 am
I’m currently renting a house that a has a large hole in the eave right outside my bedroom window. There are a couple of squirrels nesting in the eave and the bastards have been waking me up at 530am every morning.
My landlord is a piece of shite and hasn’t come through on any maintenance request including this one, so I’m going to have to do it myself.
Any tips on making sure the squirrels are out of the eaves before I board up the hole? I can hear them moving around and scratching the wood far away from where the hole is.
I’m thinking my only option is moth balls, but I’d like to avoid that smell from permeating my bedroom and also would hate for the outside of my house to smell that way as well.
My landlord is a piece of shite and hasn’t come through on any maintenance request including this one, so I’m going to have to do it myself.
Any tips on making sure the squirrels are out of the eaves before I board up the hole? I can hear them moving around and scratching the wood far away from where the hole is.
I’m thinking my only option is moth balls, but I’d like to avoid that smell from permeating my bedroom and also would hate for the outside of my house to smell that way as well.
This post was edited on 10/15/17 at 6:00 am
Posted on 10/15/17 at 6:26 am to StringedInstruments
Rat traps with peanut butter on them.
Posted on 10/15/17 at 7:28 am to ChenierauTigre
Then what? I can’t fire a weapon in my neighborhood and I’m not slicing a squirrel’s throat with a knife.
What if there are babies deep in the eave? Won’t they die and cause a smell?
What if there are babies deep in the eave? Won’t they die and cause a smell?
Posted on 10/15/17 at 7:39 am to StringedInstruments
Those live traps work great on squirrels. I had one for rats that kept eating my bird food and I'd catch 2 squirrels a day. You could release them 2 miles down the road.
What time of year do squirrels have babies? I'd think a set time? Or do they reproduce all the time? Not sure.
What time of year do squirrels have babies? I'd think a set time? Or do they reproduce all the time? Not sure.
Posted on 10/15/17 at 7:52 am to StringedInstruments
Air rifle will do the trick and your neighbors would never hear it.
Then you make a roux
Then you make a roux
Posted on 10/15/17 at 7:54 am to baldona
I read they reproduce April - June and August and September for a 2nd time that usually has a high mortality rate.
Other issue is this house has four trees growing right around it. I’m not sure I can prune it back enough to keep squirrels from getting in.
Does anyone know if there is a time of day I should expect all squirrels out of the eaves looking for food? That’s be easiest to put wire mesh over the holes.
Other issue is this house has four trees growing right around it. I’m not sure I can prune it back enough to keep squirrels from getting in.
Does anyone know if there is a time of day I should expect all squirrels out of the eaves looking for food? That’s be easiest to put wire mesh over the holes.
Posted on 10/15/17 at 6:06 pm to StringedInstruments
Nit sure if this will help or not, but as I posted in another tread, I had a problem with squirrels eating my satsumas off the tree. There is a pest control guy who lives down the street from me and I asked him what I could do about it. He told me the easiest thing to try is go to Home Depot and buy a fake owl and mountain him where he visible to the satsuma tree. Bought one and mounted it in an adjacent tree about 10 feet away from the satsuma tree. It's been there since Thursday and no more damaged satsumas. In fact, I haven't seen a squirrel anywhere in my yard since then.
This post was edited on 10/15/17 at 6:07 pm
Posted on 10/15/17 at 9:09 pm to doublecutter
You may need move the owl if they get used to it. Like to the other side, etc.
Posted on 10/16/17 at 7:51 am to StringedInstruments
I had a battle with squirrels that would rival Murray's Carl Spackler vs. the gophers in Caddyshack. Had a piece of soffit missing after Katrina, and that open invitation allowed them to set up shop, with the fruitful bounty of their new love nest producing a budding new family in my attic. Baited traps yielded no results on these crafty mystical creatures, so I resorted to hunting them one by one. They are smart little frickers. I'm in a subdivision, so I could only resort to a pellet gun and had to be careful with my shots. When I replaced the missing soffit temporarily (all part of the strategy), the squirrel that was roaming free started chewing up my soffit to try to help the trapped ones escape. Phase 2 of the plan involved opening a very small gap in the soffit so they'd only have one small calculated escape route, which gave me a singular primary target area. This was right outside my front door, so I could sit poised on the floor with the door cracked, having a clean shot at the open soffit area, or I could set up a blind on the front porch for sightline access. The free roamer knew what was up, and he'd come from behind on the roof and just hang his head over the edge and peek at me. Being retired and bored, at times I played this game of cat and tree-mouse for hours. Eventually I wore them down. Once the babies became active, they were like sitting ducks - which surprised me since the adults were so cunning. If one was out front, I would just come out the side door and creep around the corner, and when I popped out with my scoped Daisy they would just freeze and give me a wide-eyed, surprised stare like a deer in the headlights. My Daisy was too weak even for the babies, so on one occasion my first shot only resulted in partial paralysis - the wounded baby squirrel started dragging himself towards me with his little front paws with a plea of mercy in his paraplegic eyes. Not risking a ricochet off the concrete, I callously kicked him back into the grass for the torturous finishing shots. My kid still recounts that tragic, merciless story with tears in his eyes. With their babies eradicated and the unknowing parents foraging for food, I was finally able to close up the soffit for good. Bushy-tailed tenants evicted.
They still roam the grounds and taunt my Yorkie, who has made it his life mission to catch a squirrel - though, at present, to no avail.
They still roam the grounds and taunt my Yorkie, who has made it his life mission to catch a squirrel - though, at present, to no avail.
Posted on 10/16/17 at 8:08 am to StringedInstruments
I used Predator Pee from Maine Outdoor solutions for rats in an old house's attic. It worked for me. I used coyote urine. For squirrels they recommend fox urine. I would just like to know how they collect this!
LINK
LINK
Posted on 10/16/17 at 2:11 pm to cajuncarguy
quote:
I would just like to know how they collect this!
I worked on a farm that collected bull semen. Probably not the same way but we would put this big electric probe in the bull's b-hole and turn the power on. It would stimulate the prostate and the vet would sit there with a little cup on the end up a stick and catch the semen. Pretty funny to watch.
I don't know how this story is relevant to coyote urine. Sorry.
Posted on 10/16/17 at 2:35 pm to StringedInstruments
quote:
Then what? I can’t fire a weapon in my neighborhood and I’m not slicing a squirrel’s throat with a knife
5 gallon bucket of water.
Posted on 10/16/17 at 2:43 pm to StringedInstruments
Red Ryder Pellet gun. I've taken out probably 20-30 squirrels with it in suburbia. Fill hole with spray foam insulation and stuff it with pulled apart Brillo pads.
This post was edited on 10/16/17 at 2:56 pm
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