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  2. Buy a thermal scope and mount it on an air rifle. Bye Bye rat. SJC
  3. Yesterday
  4. Weird thing , the only food around here is what little sunflower seeds fall on the ground .. Im betting if he isn’t dead he will never come near that trap again
  5. I'm on a well and all this Rain is making me change my Whole House Filters more often ... Sheesh !
  6. I would not think he would be very healthy even though he got out of the trap. As mentioned above it is pretty much guaranteed that he is not the only rat, a pair can multiply into many in a short time. Here on the farm I am in constant battle with rats, mice and chipmunks 365 days out of the year, animal feed draws them in like a magnet so it is never ending. I use every tool there is to control them and keep numbers very low, traps, water bucket traps, poison, guns and dogs. Al
  7. Still haven't done anything yet. It starts everyday, I do it a few times. Have not had the problem come up again. Going to check all connections this weekend. I have two trucks so I don't use it unless its a short trip and leave it running when I go to gas station.
  8. Either dead or at the Chiropractor!
  9. Mus have been scarce, so I put some bird seed in strategic locations to draw them in. It didn't take long before a mus was in the crosshairs. SJC
  10. MUD FARMING 101: I definitely picked the right year to sell one of my old 2 wheel drive tractors. That 1951 Ford 8n, originally purchased by my old neighbor from Yoder brothers in Clarence ctr, would have struggled on the half acre that I plowed up for sweetcorn the other day, with all the wet spots. We towed it over to my buddy’s place with his truck on Saturday, after we got back from fishing. My wife had taken my pickup truck, on her annual Ohio shopping spree, so we needed his truck to get my boat to the lake. That old Ford tractor had quit on me, early last summer, with an unknown “no-spark” issue. My 5 year newer Farmall Cub exhibited a similar issue, while I was plowing snow with it, in January. It’s just too difficult for me to keep two of those old non John Deere tractors operational, while I still have a full time job. I was going to push the Ford into a corner of my barn, and let it sit there about (5) years until I retire. My buddy wanted it, to leave down at his southern tier camp, for hauling logs for milling. He said he has it running already. I gave him a new coil that I had bought for it, and a new wiring harness and a bunch of other spare parts, including a new rear rim. Amazon had accidentally shipped me two of of those, when I ordered 1, a few years ago. Oddly enough, that old Ford plowed the best that it ever did last spring, with just one loaded rear tire (on the sod side). It also has a worn out brake on the other side, from about 75 years of riding that, to compensate for the traction differential when both rears were loaded. Towing it about 5 miles to my buddy’s place was fun. The left front wheel would start shimmying pretty good at about 17 mph, and just one working brake made slowing down a little dicey. There’s an “s” curve, on the road thru the swamp, which has claimed a few lives when folks took it too fast with their cars. There were some buzzards circling over that curve, as I was towed thru it. I wasn’t quite quick enough with my phone to get a picture of them (plus I really needed both hands on the wheel to keep control thru that curve). That old Ford still has all (4) original tires on it, original paint, had always been stored inside, and only has 2100 hours on the proofmeter. I didn’t include the 2x12 plow, that came with it on the deal, but I let my buddy borrow it whenever he needs it. That plow is a little on the small side for my 4wd JD 4120, but smaller implements work a lot better than big ones on my mucky bottomland farm, especially on a wet spring like we are getting now. It’s pretty cool watching the wakes roll off the moldboards, when I pull it thru standing water, without even getting any wheel spin. I’m hoping to use my Dodge Durango field car, which has Cooper with good deep tread on it, for most of the disking, and much of cultipacking (until I get my Farmall Cub back from the mechanics) later this year. I think my 8 ft pull type disk should be just about perfect behind that. I’ll need a longer control rope to reach the front seat of the 4 door suv, with the hatchback open. No problem keeping the hatch back up, because The AC don’t work on it anyhow, but the Pioneer stereo still works great. It was still a little too wet to try it on the first pass with the dusk, on that plowed half acre, this week. I had to use my 4wd JD 4120 tractor again. That tractor has R1 tires and a loader on it, that I could use to pull myself out with, if I ever did loose traction in the mud. That JD 4120 could easily handle a 10 foot disk, but again, a small implement is way better in wet conditions. My 8 ft JD disk has good cleaners on it, so it does pretty good in wet conditions. I’m still aiming to get half of my sweetcorn planted, and maybe my fieldcorn ground plowed, by the end of May.
  11. Last week
  12. I have my camera under the deck never see him at night , always in the day and always just one i caught him in a rat trap today and thought I had him caught him right around the neck ! bastard pulled out !!! wonder if he will die ?? or will he come back
  13. Wipe peanut butter on a fence post when he shows up shoot the bastard. The peanut butter will keep him still.
  14. I seen a big buck in my yard, last evening. He doesn't seem to mind it.
  15. Not to rain on anyone's parade; Past generation farmers use to say, if you see one rat, you have ten.
  16. Don't poison the rat . It could die in the house or under the deck and then it will stink as it decays . also , if the cats decide to feast on it , they might be poisoned .
  17. Well the trap isn’t working too well
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