battling mice and voles (but never with mothballs)
THE SNOW MELTS, revealing the horror: Mice and voles have had at it in your garden, coldframe or greenhouse. As fall approaches, maybe they’re scurrying for a nesting spot in your house or garage or shed. Whatever the havoc, mothballs are not the answer—and are in fact highly toxic, and illegal for garden use. Learn how to control rodent pests safely, and how mice in particular figure into the Lyme-disease equation, too.
Though this is not new information, it apparently bears repeating. I hear from readers whenever I mention animal control–even of deer–who share the “tip” that they’ve discovered mothballs, reporting that they have spread them in a vole-besieged bed, or along their deer-pressured property line, or even in a stone wall, perhaps, to deter snakes.
No!
Any use not specifically listed on the package violates Federal law, and can also harm you, your pets, or animals in the environment, and can contaminate soil and water, according to the National Pesticide Information Center at Oregon State. Moth balls do not belong in your garden (nor in your attic, car, or crawl space).
Moth balls (and flakes) contain either napthalene or paradichlorobenzene. I frankly don’t want them in my closet, either, even inside a closed container as the directions advise, but again: Anywhere else is illegal, and dangerous.
What to do instead?
For rodents, I follow longtime organic farmer Eliot Coleman’s advice and trap year-round in key garden areas and outbuildings, placing my traps inside homemade boxes, as in the photos above and below. I like the Snap-e brand of trap (affiliate link), shown, for ease of setting and lastingness. Get the whole story on the boxes and how to use them. The box protects other animals from potentially getting injured, compared to a trap placed out in the open. I bait mine with peanut butter, because most of my prey are mice; Coleman uses no bait for trapping voles. I get voles, too, even with the bait applied.
the mouse-lyme disease connection
GARDEN DAMAGE ASIDE, I also aggressively trap rodents year round near the house—my own primary habitat!–because white-footed mice, in particular, are a primary vector for Lyme-disease transmission.Ticks that feed on mice are particularly likely to become infected with the spirochete bacterium implicated in Lyme.
“Long-term research shows that white-footed mice are the critical hosts for black-legged ticks, which carry and spread the bacterium that causes Lyme disease,” says the Cary Institute in Millbrook, New York, where extensive tick-related research is under way. Read their summary on the ecology of Lyme disease for a shorthand insight into this disease and its life cycle. “Superabundant mouse populations allow more ticks to survive and lead to predictable spikes in human Lyme disease exposure.” Scientists there are even working on a bait that could inoculate mouse populations against the bacterium.
So-called “deer ticks” usually spread the Lyme to humans as nymphs, their second life stage—and the stage at which they are more likely to be on mice or shrews (or perhaps even chipmunks) than on deer, who are more often hosts for the adult ticks.
My own vigilant “mouse patrol,” as I refer to it, may be slightly irrational–clearly, I am not capable of achieving a truly mouse-free zone. But letting their population build up unnecessarily where I am most likely to interact with them is something I prefer not to do.
One final thought about those snakes, and by association, those mice and voles:
Snakes are one of your best allies in garden pest control, with many species consuming not only rodents, but also those garden-damaging pests, slugs. A healthy garden includes snakes as part of its community, and though I may at first feel squeamish when one startles me outside, I am glad they’re here and would never harm one. Red-tailed hawks, who also like to pick off small animals like mice, racing down from the sky with more precision than any mousetrap I could employ, agree with me that snakes are great, but for another reason. They like to enjoy the occasional snake for lunch.
It’s a food chain; don’t poison it with mothballs or any other chemical. (And there are even more players in the dance, of course, than my little example above.)
Oh, and want to keep deer out? Get a fence. No kidding.
more on voles (vs. moles) and ‘nuisance wildlife’
CAN’T TELL signs of a vole from a mole, or have other “nuisance wildlife” issues, from rabbits to woodchucks to who knows who? This interview with Marnie Titchenell from Ohio State University may help. (Above, photo of voles’ surface tunneling in turf from Missouri Botanical Garden, where they have more on voles and mice.)
Fascinating. There’s not one thing in this post that I knew before I read it.
Besides one or a few good outdoor cats, the following also works well as a repeating mouse trap. Put a dowel or wire through two holes, one through the cap and the other through the bottom, of an emptied plastic water bottle. Mount the bottle horizontally near the top of a 5 gallon bucket with the dowel or the wire through holes near opposite sides of the top of a five gallon bucket. Put a couple of inches of water in the bottom of the bucket and a ring of peanut butter around the bottle. Mice go for the peanut butter, the bottle swivels around to drop them in the drink. An outside ramp may or may not be needed to help mice up to the rim of the bucket.
We call it the Bucket of Death here in my town, were my craftiest neighbors use this tactic, too (with a piece of wood as the ramp)!
Would it be possible to post a photo of this contraption? My tomato crop would be very great full! Many thanks
Hi, Carol. You mean the mouse-trap box in the story or something else?
Thanks for your stern warnings about poisoning the environment. The way the food chain is disrupted by the un-informed with floods of chemicals will be our undoing.
Yay, Snakes! I personally love them. We have seen the garter snakes and corn snakes (who eat mice!) Nearby are timber rattlers – not at our place, but in the rocky areas nearby – not to be trifled with but good allies in the fight. And our builders saw two big bull snakes snorking down on baby bunnies – one even turned on our foreman when he tried to harass it, baby bunny in mouth….wish I’d been there. Pretty sure they’re eating mouses and voles too.
Did not know that Lyme disease was more prevalent with mousies. Good info to know, thanks!
Thank you, Margaret, for your mouse and vole trapping tips. We have been using this method for the past two months and have had much success! Our garden thanks you!
I was momentarily terrified and then ecstatic when I saw the snake in my garden a couple of years ago. He has been a definite deterrent to mice, voles and chipmunks.
i do not mind moles but the voles and mice are just horrible…the voles do not seem to go into the traps…the mice have actually eaten the covering on electrical wires which really is a danger…we cannot have a cat due to allergies and many ground nesting birds…i try to encourage snakes and owls and hawks but i am getting very frustrated…i won’t use poison but really is frustrating…i will try the boxes mentioned above…..until you can get a fence for deer this works very well and last two weeks or more…1 CUP MILK..2 EGGS…A FEW DROPS OF SAFERS SOAP AND 10 LITERS OF WATER…spray on anything a deer will eat and you will be amazed…no smell and does not hurt any leaves or friut
As I live in Texas I am not keen to attract snakes……the large number of little grass snakes eat bugs and are harmless… but we have every toxic snake known to man.. except the cobra.. so ‘they’ say.. personally I wouldn’t be surprised to find one ! The snakes also climb up in the trees and into bird boxes and eat baby birds. The bird community usually come together to peck the snakes until they go away…so if you hear a cacophony of birds please look to see where the snakes are raiding nests.
Hi, Josee. We have Eastern timber rattlers and copperheads here, too. Not as many as you do, but I do understand!
I ended up with mice tunneling in my front yard and flowerbed this winter because I had laid down cardboard and paper underneath mulch to kill the grass. They used it as a nice and cozy escape from the heavy snow. Now I’m trapping them with sticky traps (caught 4 so far)! I bought some old fashioned snap traps but haven’t used those yet.
Margaret we also use traps with no bait. We place the traps in the line of paths. You can see the paths…slight openings in beds across lawns…subtle but once you see them the voles and mice run right into the trap and are caught.
I know this sounds icky but it works to keep mice, voles, rabbits, squirrels, chipmunks AND deer out of my gardens (veggie and flowers). When I scoop my cats’ litter boxes I place the clumped urine in small biodegradable baggies and tuck them around / under plants and shrubs. Usually about 3-4 feet apart. If I have just planted trees or shrubs I place the bag in the shrub or against the trunk. They last more than a month – longer in the colder months. Seems to work under the snow we get in the Bershires, too Humans don’t smell them but the critters seem to hate them. I scatter them in my barn and potting shed, too. My greenhouse is a maze of sticky traps and my indoor cats do a great job in the house.
Hi, JS. I’d hesitate to introduce either the litter or cat waste to the garden, particularly where edibles are being grown. Perhaps if you are using a totally natural material such as untreated sawdust for the litter then the litter itself isn’t a problem (even the clay ones are dicey, I fear), but I just don’t know about the animal waste, even if no solids. But it sounds like it works!
Sticky traps for mice are really cruel …
I agree.
Welcome, Judy. Just say no to toxic mothballs, right?
It saddens me how many people kill snakes. Last night, I went to close the coop, and curled into one of the nesting boxes was an enormous black rat snake, feasting on eggs! I was NOT happy, particularly because my husband usually relocates the snakes…and he wasn’t home. I can do a lot of things, but grabbing a snake is not one of them. I did, however, take a photo and posted it to my Garden Delights Facebook page, and the number of people who recommended shooting it or killing it with a hoe was horrifying! (Moth balls were also recommended. Ummm…no.) Of course, I wasn’t happy with a snake in the coop, but for the most part, this is a good guy. Give me non-venomous snakes over voles any day in the garden.
Does this technique work on groundhogs? They are destroying my garden and even the stone walls.
Will this work for rats? Because…yep. They’re there.
DH.
Hi, Don. Well, I have never had the joy of rats (all the local farms do of course, with their stored grain bins and such). But I know the routine and here’s the important part: You’ll need larger snap traps (aka rat traps)! Also if you make the boxes, make the holes larger.
Or, try a more sustainable, bio diverse approach. Every mouse or vole you trap and kill takes food away from the owls, the snakes, the hawks, etc. If you just let it all be–nothing will ever be a problem. If there are too many mice, the others will move in and take care of it for you. We are all disrupting the natural balance by impatiently interfering.
Hi, Cher. Well, here’s my thought: First, white-footed mice are the primary vector of Lyme here in the Northeast (not deer), so I think reducing the number in the immediate area of my house, so that they don’t nest in here and I don’t come into unneeded contact with them, is smart. And here is the part you will like better: I use no poison ever, of course, and put the fresh-trapped ones out each morning (if I catch any, I mean) for the crows, raccoons, whomever to eat. (Even the burying beetles here appreciate them.) So nothing is wasted or removed or flushed down a toilet or anything.
I’ve never come back the next morning after leaving one to find it still there! :)
Thanks for your heads up for these filthy vermin,last nite one was on the screen in my bedroom,on the 2nd floor,I closed the window on the little monster,it is gone,but I will start getting the traps etc.Elena
Margaret, What is the brand name of the traps you use? I have tried a number of them with minimal success. Thanks, Cecilia
Hi, Cecilia. I use Snap-E; Eliot Coleman likes the The Better Mousetrap (by Intruder). Amazon (and many hardware stores of course) have both.
margaret, your chosen topics and advice continue to educate and impress me. It does astound me how one person can have the beauty, brains and energy that you have. I really hope that if you ever feel down at the end of a particularly grueling day, that you realize how many thousands of people you help every day. What a difference you make in the world!
Thanks, Mindy. You made me smile! I love learning about things by writing about them — the longtime journalist in me (and my parents and sister). Hope all is well with you.
Does the mouse trap box also catch the voles. Do the toads get in it by accident.
Also how do you keep the dog and cat out of it.?
The box that Eliot Coleman designed (and I was inspired by) was originally for his vole problem, so yes, you will catch voles. I have no dog or cat to worry about, but when I did have a cat he had no interest in the boxes. Part of the reason you put the traps in the boxes is to reduce anything else (birds, frogs…) from getting into the traps, so no, I have never had that, either.
We now have 4 places around our house where we have traps set-2 boxes like yours, one trap inside a wooden tunnel my husband made and one behind a board where we always see droppings. I plan to make a chart and record where we are the most successful as the weather turns cooler. We have tried various locations and will try to record that information as well. Although we have not checked to see if our dead mice disappear, I will try to be more attentive to that as well. I will report back in the spring. Always like a new project!
Hi, Carole. I Hope the mice got the memo to stay away or else! :)
I’ve been meaning to build some of those boxes. My best weapon against voles is a fast riding mower I’ve named the vole-oceraptor!
We live in Florida, and are over run with Armadillos, cute but they can distroy 2 acres in a hurry! My poor old German Shepherd nearly broke a leg, chasing a ball and tripping in a foot deep hole! Wouldn’t kill them, but would love to get rid of them! And yes, those sticky traps are so inhumane, please don’t use them!
Hi, Dee, and armadillos! Oh, my. I guess each region has its least-welcome garden visitors, huh? Thanks for saying hello.
My husband uses a small bin with lid. He just drilled a hole and set the traps! Works quite well too!
Thanks, Judy — yes, creating an enclosed place for the traps seems to help reduce the number of traps that disappear, too!
do you have any suggestions for rabbits? Do rabbits carry ticks also? They did significant damage to our beautiful prairie fire crab apple tree, a young oak tree, and a well established Japanese maple. The lower sections of trunks were protected but the snow went up beyond that point.
I don’t know if rabbits are considered a host for the black-legged ticks and especially their nymphs. Rabbits are the trickiest of opponents, because they are VERY hard to live-trap, and also because they can get under many fences (best to bury sturdy mesh 6 to 10 inches, and extend fencing 2 feet or 30 inches above-ground minimum). In a bad winter, all bets are off as you discovered with your protected trees, since they can walk on top of the snow. Because they feed in winter (unlike woodchucks, my other un-favorite garden visitor) and are so hard to trap (woodchucks are a cinch…because they return to the burrow regularly) I think rabbits are truly formidable.
I had a overgrown area of Tansy which I use to cut mid summer and place around the fieldstone basement walls of my 18 c. Cape in Maine to keep the mice and spiders at bay. I literally stuck it into holes and openings floor to ceiling.
I also had a slew of snakes who would sun themselves on several big flat granite stones which made up the patio, which was surrounded by old gardens of climbing roses, peony, lilacs and Beebalm. The snakes are always welcome in my garden.
Hi, Becky. Though I have a strong visceral reaction to the sight of snakes, I love their presence and would never hurt one, and am grateful to them for the housekeeping they perform, too. Thanks for saying hello.
Hi Margaret,
Well, our beloved dog died in the fall and with him our mouse control! We are inundated and I have been declaring war! So thanks for the tips–we are aggressively fighting back.
And, will spring ever come?! I’ve stubbornly been out there and started seeds, but it’s just so miserably cold! sigh…. (and I suppose I’ll be whining about the heat in July).
I miss Jack the Cat still, Nora, and the wild animal population has swelled on all fronts since his departure. And no, spring will never come, or so it appears. Goodness, what a wait!