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🐾 Your eco-friendly rodent solution awaits!
MouseX1lb Bag offers an all-natural, poison-free solution for effectively eliminating mice and rats. Formulated with safe, naturally derived ingredients, it works quickly within 24 to 48 hours and is safe for use around people, pets, and livestock. Perfect for both professional and DIY applications, it also significantly reduces rodent odors.
Specification Met | EPA |
Item Weight | 16 ounces |
Active Ingredients | Corn Gluten Meal, Sodium Chloride |
Target Species | Rodents |
Item Form | Pellets |
H**R
works for me
Seems to work great! Mice do not die in the house thankfully. My dog ate one and did not get sick. I put them in places where my dog cannot reach them just to be sure. They lose their effectiveness after about 1 year.
M**9
Don't Waste Your Money on This. My Mice Were PIcky Eaters and Didn't Eat It!
This did not work when used as directed because the mice wouldn't even eat it. I had been overrun with mice at my previous residence and I like to try to keep the stray cats, wildlife and other things that feed on mice safe from secondary poisoning. I got this stuff because I had heard a lot of good things about it from friends and at $20 it was worth it to try to get my problem under control once and for all.Well, these same mice who were not discerning in the least and would eat bars of soap, repellent sachets, trash, and even chew on chicken bones in the middle of the night would not touch this stuff for love nor money. It's almost like they knew it had something in it that would dry them up and dehydrate them. I even tried mixing it with peanut butter and they just ate around it and left the pellets.I ended up spending ten more dollars at the local feed store and bought the green blocks that actually poisoned them to death. I had no mice within three days on the competitor product and I hoped like the dickens that I didn't find any dead owls, hawks, my friendly little garden snakes, or stray cats from eating mice who had eaten the poison.It's a great idea in theory but my suggestion would be to make these in some kind of a flavor that will actually entice the mice. For some reason, as I said, I had to go with an actual poison product that actually was infused with something to attract them and make them eat it. This just did not do the job, and I am sorry about that.
J**R
Works Great — Some Advice on Effectiveness
We have mice that hang around our chicken coop and occasionally make their way into our house. I pay for professional services—setting bait houses and a regular visit to monitor how much they’re eating, etc. But the problem is, the mice generally go for the chicken feed and only go for the bait houses in areas further from the chicken coop.We put away our chickens’ food at night, but there’s always some morsels they scratch out of their container. And the mice are on it as soon as dusk falls. So there is a constant population. That’s stumped me for a while now.These pellets look very similar to the pelleted chicken feed, so I was hopeful. When I got them I placed a significant pile right in a main pathway directly under the feeding area—about which, I use five gallon buckets with a single gravity feeder opening in each. I slip the feeder tube through an opening I have in their enclosure, which allows me to keep the buckets on the outside of their cage. I then put the buckets in galvanized, steel trash cans, which are mouse proof. I have a short rectangular pedestal the buckets sit on to elevate the openings to a comfortable height for the girls. So I left pellets in front of the pedestal on the outside of the enclosure, out of the chickens’s reach.The first night, about 2/3s of the pile was gone. I replenished it—and added pellets to an old bucket I use to use as a feeder. Again the pile near the coop was well fed upon. They didn’t seem as interested in the decoy feeder. I tried setting it on the pedestal (again, in such a way as to prevent the chickens from getting it), and that worked a bit. Hard to tell if it would be more popular had I not already killed some and didn’t have a more accessible pile they could access.I think the main thing to consider is placement: put the bait in the mice’s path. If it’s not as obvious as my situation, you could potentially take video or look for areas where there’s a lot of scat.I’ve seen reviews where people coated the pellets in peanut butter powder. I haven’t tried that, but I think it could definitely increase the uptake of the bait. As a little bit of pb powder goes a long way, the cost of adding powder is minimal. It’s a hell of a lot cheaper than professional services. I canceled my subscription because the report from the last visit showed very little interest in the baits.Good luck!
J**M
Not working
It does not work. I saw on camera they ate baits from day one. I added peanut butter powder on top as some reviews. It’s been over two weeks both rodents are pretty much alive.
R**H
Hesitantly optimistic
Per the recommendation of another reviewer I sprayed these with cooking spray and then tossed them in pb powder before placing them under my cabinet where I found droppings. In total I probably put a 1/2 cup out and that night I could hear the mice loudly rushing to gobble them up. A couple days later the pellets were completely gone . Today is the third day and last night was like a tomb. It is so quiet I can hardly believe it. I hope this means they are on their way to the golden kitchen in the sky.
M**R
Important Weapon in an Ongoing Battle
I have been using this for about a year because I can't figure out where the mice are coming into my house, so I have a constant flow, although the population has dwindled quite a bit. If I see a mouse or signs of a mouse, I throw a handful of these in the area. I don't use this product alone - I also have set out snap traps and I have a cat who's quite the hunter - but I consider this a strong weapon in the war. I'm comfortable knowing if any other animal ingests any of these pellets, or mouse corpses afterwards, there won't be any secondary poisoning or affect. I also have never smelled any decaying rodent bodies - my understanding is this stuff mummifies them.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 month ago