Coffee can mousetrap

344930096 F3B882Dd7F
MAKE Flickr photo pool member PLC.Doctor writes -

"I built this after finding droppings on my workbench. The edge of the wire mesh is reinforced with number 8 bare copper wire. I didn't want the little bugger to squeeze past the edge of the can." - Link.

Related:

  • PIC controlled, stepper motor driven mouse trap - Link.
  • A better mousetrap! - Link.
  • HOW TO - Catch a mouse without a mousetrap - Link.
  • Homemade humane mousetraps - Link.


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Comments

Oldest comments listed first.

Posted by: Senseless on January 5, 2007 at 8:03 AM

Great Idea!


Posted by: aolshove on January 5, 2007 at 8:24 AM

Good build but not PLC.Doctor's invention (not that he said it was). This design has been around for many many years.

posted sometime in or prior to 2003: http://marquardts.org/mindspring/mice/index.htm

See Figure 3: http://www.nps.gov/archive/wica/NSS_1959_Expedition_Faunal_Survey.htm

To the author's credit, the copper ring around the mesh is a good innovation to keep the little buggers in the can.


Posted by: SmartAZ on January 5, 2007 at 10:36 AM

1. Fill the can half way with water.
2. Put a paper over the top.
3. Secure the paper with a rubber band.
4. Cut an X in the paper.
5. Suspend the bait over the X.
6. Place a stick or small board from the can to some nearby object so the mouse has easy access.
7. In the morning just toss the can out. Ok, you can look. Ya pervert!


Posted by: finkbuilt on January 5, 2007 at 10:44 AM

Wow, blast from the past.

I made this trap when I was in 3rd grade, in order to catch an escaped class hamster that was living in the wall of the school library (it worked). I first saw the idea in a small book from the 1940's called "How to Make a Miniature Zoo".

Steve Lodefink


Posted by: howajo on January 5, 2007 at 11:10 AM

Some people might find drowning an animal slowely in a can of water a little inhumane.


Posted by: jswilson64 on January 6, 2007 at 7:22 AM

The drowning is pretty quick - it's the swimming around until exhaustion sets in that's slow...


Posted by: Unomi on January 6, 2007 at 2:44 PM

The mesh has gaps as wide as the thickness of a pencil. A mouse can get out.... Make the mesh as small as possible, since mice are very keen to slip trough small holes.

And about the drowning: once I saw a mouse wich had broken a leg (or two). I picked it up (with something else than my hands) and threw it in the toilet and flushed it. My colleagues found that inhumane too. But what is worse? Keep it from suffering or keep it alive with a broken leg (or two)?

Few weeks later the exterminator came in to clean the lot with poison. Talking about inhumanity...

- Unomi -


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