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The Endless Quest For a Better Mousetrap (newyorker.com) 87

Inventors have been refining them for centuries. What are they trying to achieve? From a report: Today, there are only a few kinds of mousetraps available at a typical hardware store: snap traps, glue traps, electric traps, bucket traps, and live-capture traps. And yet, inventors have filed more than forty-five hundred U.S. patents for animal traps, about a thousand of which are specifically related to mice. (Many inventors don't specify the intended targets of their traps.) Presumably, some mousetrap inventors have been spurred on by a quote widely attributed to Ralph Waldo Emerson: "Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door." Emerson probably never said exactly this; what he did write down, in a journal, was that the world would beat a path to the door of anyone who sold better corn, wood, boards, pigs, chairs, knives, crucibles, or church organs. There's nothing uniquely profitable about mousetraps. Still, people keep inventing them, probably because mice are such a widespread nuisance.

Some inventors come up with mousetraps because of firsthand rodent experiences. One company well known for traps that can hold multiple mice at once, for instance, was founded by a janitor at an Iowa high school who noticed that mice were eating the students' lunches. But, just as there are too many mice, there are too many mousetraps. In a 2011 paper, Dagg, the schoolteacher, found that only four per cent of the mousetraps patented in the United States have been commercially produced -- and many designs are never even patented. The Trap History Museum, outside Columbus, Ohio, houses what is very likely the world's largest collection of mousetraps. Many of the designs on view there would be prohibitively expensive to mass-produce, given their unwieldy size or reliance on wacky technologies. Others barely work, having apparently been designed to function on only the rarest of occasions. Some designs are dreamy and imaginative; like contemporary art, they are valued for those qualities, not because they make it easier to keep a mouse-free home. You wouldn't pee in a toilet mounted on a gallery wall. Likewise, you wouldn't get much use out of a trap, patented in 1908, that affixes a jangly collar to a mouse so that it will annoy other mice until they flee their compatriot for the great outdoors.

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The Endless Quest For a Better Mousetrap

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  • by LondoMollari ( 172563 ) on Friday November 25, 2022 @01:06PM (#63079216) Homepage

    He has only been checking mousetraps out for a few years on YouTube. I would have thought we found the best mouse trap by now and I think he said it was the Flip n Slide.

    • Nobody patented a cat?
      • Cats are of variable effectiveness. I've had cats that were exceptional mousers. My current cat is older and missing many teeth, so kills are slow and torturous. It is all natural though.
        • by taustin ( 171655 )

          My current cat is older and missing many teeth, so kills are slow and torturous.

          For the cat, or for the mouse?

        • It's not exactly illegal to get another cat before the elderly cat hits his/her expiration date.

          Though I admit that I'm not going to replace my current cats. They're probably good for another 15-20 years, but I doubt seriously that *I* am good for another 15-20 years. And I don't want to leave orphan cats & dogs behind...

          • My cat (adopted from the HS) does not seem to like other cats much. I've considered bringing a kitten home to see how she reacts, but it would be highly inconvenient if it does not go well.
            • I've considered bringing a kitten home to see how she reacts, but it would be highly inconvenient if it does not go well.

              Many shelters will allow you to bring your current dog/cat to see if it gets along with a prospective additional animal.

              Even if that is not possible, it is a bad idea to "bring home" a new animal. Instead, it is better to introduce your old and new pets in a neutral place, such as a park, so they can sniff and play together for a while before going home. This reduces the chance of triggering the territorial instinct.

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Mink or Ferret are much better mousers.

      • There is a segregation distorter (I think it is called that) that makes all the mouse offspring males who carry the same gene. This causes mice to locally go extinct. It would make an intersting way to control mice.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Huh... that's not too different from what I "invented" to get rid of a vole once. It kept escaping the commercial live traps, and I didn't want to use a lethal trap. So I set up a large vase and built a ramp to the top; on the top, the bait was hanging from the bottom of some strips of paper plate that would give way when the vole stood on it. And it totally worked. :) I heard immediately when it went off, I'm glad I did, because it was already trying to prop up the pieces of the paper plate (which fell

  • Great timing. England vs USA starts in 50 minutes.
  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Friday November 25, 2022 @01:16PM (#63079234) Homepage Journal

    There are only four kinds of mouse trap worth using. Classic snap trap, cheap and good. No-kill box trap, cheap and good enough if your goal is for some reason to not kill the vermin, like you want to throw them into your neighbor's yard I guess. Bucket flip lid trap, effective for high volumes. And the electric trap, which is the best for everyone else.

    Every other kind of trap is overwrought and/or requires too much cleaning.

    • Sticky traps work well too, but I'll admit they are inhumane. If the mice do so much damage that you hate them enough that may not matter.
      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        Sticky traps will kill the mouse eventually, probably from heart failure.

        Assuming they don't chew the limb off that's stuck in it.

        • The other night, one of them tried to chew the fur off its skin to escape. Not pretty. It just ended up getting stuck elsewhere on the glue. Poison was of limited usefulness -- eventually killed the adults, but the young ones seemed to be too smart for that (maybe they figured out what killed the older ones), but glue traps are working for most of the ones left (so far).
    • by larwe ( 858929 )
      There are multiple reasons for using live traps, one of them is that not every species you encounter indoors is a pest. There are native species of rodent that you really shouldn't be arbitrarily eradicating if you can help it.
      • But what are you going to do with them, release them outside so they can come back inside? Animal control doesn't want them, I'm not having them in my house, and I'm not going to relocate them someplace else for them to be a problem for someone else, or more likely just wasted effort because they're a quick meal for something else. I don't want to be in contact with them for that long, for obvious reasons.

        I'm not bothering to live trap anything the size of a mouse.

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          But what are you going to do with them, release them outside so they can come back inside? Animal control doesn't want them, I'm not having them in my house, and I'm not going to relocate them someplace else for them to be a problem for someone else, or more likely just wasted effort because they're a quick meal for something else. I don't want to be in contact with them for that long, for obvious reasons.

          I'm not bothering to live trap anything the size of a mouse.

          Well, if you live in an area where mice are

      • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

        There are multiple reasons for using live traps, one of them is that not every species you encounter indoors is a pest.

        I think if the mouse is in your house and it isn't a pet then it is most definitely a pest.

        There are native species of rodent that you really shouldn't be arbitrarily eradicating if you can help it.

        At the rate mice reproduce it is rather difficult to eradicate them (not impossible but not easy either). I would hazard to guess that if you are only trapping mice inside your house the likelihood of eradicating the species is almost nill.

    • I'd like to point out the brutality of the glue traps. I've heard from others...They're no good for no-kill and furthermore make killing it a very personal affair. That's after you've pulled at the animal and broke it already and then just bury it alive in writhing pain. Drowning it is the most humane with these.
    • by jonadab ( 583620 )
      Indeed. By far the most lucrative innovation in the history of mousetraps, was when some genius in the first half of the twentieth century realized he could print the word "disposable" on the packaging, without changing anything else. Not only did it provide a competitive advantage; it also generated repeat sales. Realistically, nobody is ever going to top that.
  • YT is full of such videos. They stay alive in the bucker, ready to be fed to crocodiles, alligators, and velociraptors.
    • I tried that and they didn't like it. The flip lid trap is better because it is sturdy until they overbalance.

  • I got a new car in May. by June, I started hearing rattling in the back, I invested it, and it was mouse droppings. So I cleaned up the droppings and setup a mouse trap in my cars back seat. So far I only caught one, and it might had only been one, but we are never sure.

    A farm with food, may attract hundreds or thousands of mice, so a different type of trap is needed. If you own an apartment complex then you need a different approach.

    There are going to be new mousetraps designs well into the future, unle

    • I got a new car in May. by June, I started hearing rattling in the back, I invested it, and it was mouse droppings. So I cleaned up the droppings and setup a mouse trap in my cars back seat. So far I only caught one, and it might had only been one, but we are never sure.

      Rodents can easily write off a car. My late father's car was written off by squirrels. Chewed clean through wiring harnesses as thick as my thumb, copper and all.

  • "You wouldn't pee in a toilet mounted on a gallery wall."

    YoU wOuLdnT DowNLoAd a CaR

    • "You wouldn't pee in a toilet mounted on a gallery wall."

      Oh I wouldn't, wouldn't I? I know convenience when I see it.

    • by larwe ( 858929 )
      Right? There's a REASON that the display toilets in IKEA etc have lucite panels across the bowls with "THIS IS NOT A REAL TOILET, GO TO THE RESTROOMS OVER THERE" type warnings on them.
      • I know someone who is a real estate agent. He tells me of giving a tour of a show home when one of the group disappears. Needed to use the washroom. Noooo!

        I think he carries some jugs of water with him always now.
    • "You wouldn't pee in a toilet mounted on a gallery wall."

      ...unless, of course, you wanted "to go where no man had gone before".

  • But it has to be the stuff that kills them in one feeding and desicates their bodies so they don't smell. Many places don't trust ordinary folks with such things so you either need to hire a professional or procure it on the grey market.
    • You mean the kind where they're poisoned after being trapped in a box, right? Because I don't trust people with rodent poison in general, most people don't give two shits about consequences of their actions apparently.

      • You mean the kind where they're poisoned after being trapped in a box, right?

        You could do that I suppose, but it defeats the purpose.

        Because I don't trust people with rodent poison in general

        Some people can't be trusted with cars, guns, or anything else. What we need are idiot traps.

        • What we need are idiot traps.

          We have 'em, but we don't exterminate people in them. Instead, they are radicalized. Anyhoo, people are already killing off the animals that prey on rodents by poisoning rodents indiscriminately. It's not a winning strategy.

        • We have them, but they become overcrowded, some are released to do real damage, and end up right back in.

          And city politicians are becoming more lenient on more and more serious crimes.

    • But it has to be the stuff that kills them in one feeding and desicates their bodies so they don't smell.

      Never heard of such stuff. Bad idea anyway because they still attract flies, and do you really want dead mouse bodies in hiding places all over the house? Because the poisoned mice crawl to a hiding place before they die. Found lots like that in a house I moved into.

      • and do you really want dead mouse bodies in hiding places all over the house? Because the poisoned mice crawl to a hiding place before they die. Found lots like that in a house I moved into.

        My house is 125 years old. I'm sure there are many mouse skeletons hidden within.

      • Not all of them hide. I found one that looked like it was frozen in mid step.
  • Audio [thisamericanlife.org] and transcript [thisamericanlife.org]. Though you really should listen to it. Just the intro, it's about 5-8 minutes long if that.
  • by Pollux ( 102520 ) <[ge.ten.atadet] [ta] [reteps]> on Friday November 25, 2022 @01:48PM (#63079304) Journal

    A decade ago, I bought a house that had mice that got in via our stove's gas line. I went to Ace Hardware to buy some classic wooden & metal traps, but the clerk told me the one I needed to get was this JAWZ model [acehardware.com]. We bought four of them and set them up w/ peanut butter as bait. That night, we killed four mice, and another five over the next week.

    That set of traps killed over 20 mice in our house over the course of the year. Every trap was an instant-kill...snapped the varmint's neck clean, every time. Cheap and simple.

    • Snapped the vermin's neck?

      Those things pulverise the head, neck and part of the back and stick some knobbles through the brain. They look pretty medieval. On the other hand I think they are very quick.

      They are also quite powerful. I had one go boing and project itself so far I couldn't see it. When checking the traps, my brain was looking or full traps, not missing ones. Eventually my nose caught it.

      • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

        The early bird gets the worm, but the seconds mouse gets the cheese. *ba dum dump*

        I'll see myself out...

      • by darenw ( 74015 )

        Blah! Not only do those traps sound dangerous, it's easy to imagine how 'fun' cleaning them would be.

        Live catch traps only for me. No ooky corpse to eliminate, let the little bugger run loose, and the eagles and hawks will be pleased to find fresh snacks in the meadow.

        • Blah! Not only do those traps sound dangerous, it's easy to imagine how 'fun' cleaning them would be.

          They're not dangerous to humans. I possibly exaggerated a bit, but the mouse head looks pretty flattened, not just a snapped neck. They don't actually break the skin, so you just open it and the mouse falls out.

          Live catch traps only for me. No ooky corpse to eliminate, let the little bugger run loose, and the eagles and hawks will be pleased to find fresh snacks in the meadow.

          Problem or me is I leave the tra

    • Four traps caught 20 mice in a year? That's nothing. At the peak of their activity I was trapping four mice every day; got a cat after that. That JAWS model is obviously plastic, which is no good. I bought some with plastic in the mechanism and they soon wore out. It is impossible to set them with the needed sensitivity after a few shots, you need metal-on-metal for a hair trigger that does not soon wear into a rounded edge. Plastic also has a higher coeficient of expansion than steel, so the plastic tr
    • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 )

      Another vote for Jawz!
      I put 12 of them in a circle around a pile of birdseed

  • by Shazatoga ( 614011 ) on Friday November 25, 2022 @01:50PM (#63079308)
    problem solved. It has to be a cat that lives partly outside. Cats forced to live inside become too brain damaged from that torture.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      Indoor cats are less likely to have vet incidentals and are far more likely to live longer. The above generalization would only be true if you didn't provide your cat with enough indoor stimulation in the form of toys, surfaces that they can are perfectly free to climb and scratch, etc.

      All of our cats are strictly indoors. The one time that we had mice to deal with, it turned out that at least one of our cats was actually a pretty darn good mouser.

      • I gather its a USA thing to keep cats indoors all their lives. In the UK we would consider that somewhat shocking and unkind. I keep a new cat indoors for a week or two to ensure he recognises it is his new home, but it soon becomes torturous for both the cat and me. A cat's natural environment is sheds, alleyways, trees and bushes.
        • A cat's nature is to kill potentially hundreds of songbirds and small animals over its lifespan too. Not a fan of outdoor cats for that reason.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Songbirds are noisy. Fuck 'em. Go cats!

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          They don't last long outside as the Coyotes have expanded their habitat to most N. American cities and like a cat dinner.

        • by mark-t ( 151149 )
          Being indoors is only torture for a cat that has nothing to do inside.
    • Cats are an invasive species. They kill billions of birds and other small animals every year.
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      > Cats forced to live inside become too brain damaged

      Oh shit, does this apply to humans also?

  • Water + Anti-Freeze = Coolant - the greenish one with glycol

    I have had so many dead mice in that bucket when I drained my old timer and left the bucket in the garage it is just the best mouse trap at all.

    glycol = sweet, but deadly

  • by bb_matt ( 5705262 ) on Friday November 25, 2022 @02:58PM (#63079452)

    I've had my share of issues with rodents sharing my accommodation.

    A house I was renting some years back, had a single rat problem that gave me nightmares and ended up with a young healthy rat thrashing in a back breaker, until I dispatched it with a smash of a hammer. It was fucking awful.
    That rat had plagued me for weeks, ate my soap, my potatoes, shat on my bedside table whilst I slept, ate my tobacco - not joking, this was years back.
    The resident cat was afraid of it.
    I felt awful both whilst knowing the rat was like a foot from me whist I slept and that I put it to a god awful end.

    Some years later, "Malcolm" the mouse, that me and my other half named, made us both understand just how much piss and mess a mouse can cause in a kitchen.
    The great irony being, it was absolutely dragged into the house by our cat.

    We tried everything - because clearly, our cat had befriended "Malcolm" and wasn't about to kill him.
    Every single "humane"? trap - all failed.

    The only thing that worked? - the awful back-breaker.
    After weeks of having to clean out the cupboards every day of mouse piss and shit, the back-breaker worked - "Malcolm" met his end.

    Mice are easy to deal with, rats aren't.

    Bottom line - the backbreaker trap is the only one that actually works. That nasty old spring laden thing that jokes are made of.
    Not all are created equal - it requires a serious spring loaded tension that breaks bodies.
    It's horrible... but so is an infestation of mice or rats.

    • Every single "humane"? trap - all failed.

      The only thing that worked? - the awful back-breaker.
      After weeks of having to clean out the cupboards every day of mouse piss and shit, the back-breaker worked - "Malcolm" met his end.

      Mice are easy to deal with, rats aren't.

      Bottom line - the backbreaker trap is the only one that actually works. That nasty old spring laden thing that jokes are made of.
      Not all are created equal - it requires a serious spring loaded tension that breaks bodies.
      It's horrible... but so is an infestation of mice or rats.

      The spring loaded snap trap is quite humane, quick kill

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Rats learn to not take the bait after you catch a few, then, if as recommended, they are against a wall, they get a leg caught. No fun to deal with a huge pissed off rat with its leg badly injured and body in the gap between the cupboards.

      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        Most of the time. When I lived in a house which had mice, I killed three or four with a snap trap and then the next one was caught by the jaw but still alive, so I had to kill it. After that I switched to live traps and leaving them in a park for less squeamish predators.

      • Agreed, we don't need a better mouse trap.

  • House mice (Score:5, Interesting)

    by kackle ( 910159 ) on Friday November 25, 2022 @03:18PM (#63079502)
    We lived in a house for 14 years without a mouse. Then, the roofers replaced the shingles along with cheaper (no surprise) roof vent caps. The built in screens were only stapled in three places which allowed the mice access. I caught a dozen mice in the house in the coming months. This "cat and mouse" game would have gone on forever unless I had found the hole. The drama was instantly over after that. My advice to you: Use your logic. Find the hole.

    Traps only mean you will be dealing with dead animals forever. Traps do not guarantee they won't do serious damage (electrical?) before caught. Poison means they might die in a place where they are inaccessible except via very expensive means. I had one die in my car and I had to gut the car's interior, driving it around for months with just a driver's seat, before finding the it had died in a welded channel that took a 3-foot long grabber tool to retrieve (through a small hole using a mirror), and then it still smelled until I cleaned the channel twice with bleach on a sponge with that grabber tool. Awful.

    And be careful about what you read, I believe a dead mouse can smell for years (another long story).
    • by darenw ( 74015 )

      Indeed, find and block the holes, including the ones that look too small. I swear, mice turn sideways into the 4th, 5th and 6th dimensions becoming point particles in the physical world, to go through the tiniest hole. Find those holes!

      • by kackle ( 910159 )
        If they can time travel, perhaps we should be trying to communicate with them. Seriously, I am suspect of any holes the size of their skull or larger.
  • This just in... mice still exist and are a nuisance.
  • For every problem, there are myriads of potential solutions, and the choices made by engineers depend on the specific criteria they want to focus on. Each "feature" has a cost and a benefit, which have to be weighed according to the priorities of the user.

    For mouse traps, the classic snap trap is quick, cheap, simple, and painless for the mouse. But some people are squeamish about killing any kind of animal for any reason, and those people would prioritize traps that don't harm the creature.

    Glue traps aren'

    • by darenw ( 74015 )

      I use a live catch trap, a metal box with weighted flaps in the entrances that most mice can't figure out how to escape through. One nice thing about this trap is that one mouse can be stuck inside, enjoying bananas and peanut butter, while its old buddy still outside comes along, and it's basically an invitation to join the party. One morning I found three mice in the box. One captured mouse seems to attract more.

      Quite the opposite of glue traps and other types I've heard of, where one unfortunate squeak

  • I can't believe the engineers have still not figure out that the best solution to design a mousetrap is to use machine learning. Clearly I'm no expert; but ask our machine learning friend they'll tell you how to do it!

  • by markjhood2003 ( 779923 ) on Friday November 25, 2022 @08:36PM (#63080130)
    I never had a rat problem in the house, but every now and then I would see see a partial rat carcass in our back yard -- everything except the head and large intestine apparently devoured. It was a real mystery to me until I looked up a feather I found and discovered that we apparently have a barn owl living nearby.
  • We live in the country, so we get mice coming in in the winter. It ain't possible to block up the holes in an old house like ours. I've tried several modern traps. There's an excellent "humane" trap (leave them in there too long and they die of dehydration) except they eat the plastic trigger.
    The most reliable is the "little nipper", as shown in countless Tom and Jerry cartoons; it's also the cheapest, It provides a quick death, if you're sensitive to such things.

    At one stage, I thought our mice had evo

    • I completely agree. Little nipper has a hair trigger, causes a quick death, and is very cheap. Cheap is good because you want to use as many traps as possible when you first notice the mice.

      Once the mice realize what the traps are, it becomes more about outsmarting them than anything else. They figure out very quickly how to clean off the trigger mechanism without dying, or they just simply avoid the trap. The best trick I've found was to use two traps in quick succession. Mouse jumps the first trap
  • Another shitstain editor saying OK to this story. Hey, writers! it's about time for a new mousetrap story! Can't we keep that shit alive for another generation? Come up with a new angle! Can we just move-fucking-on from this enforced cuteness? Your job isn't worth it and neither is the writer's if you can't come up with something...I dunno, less culturally re-fucking-dundant? Newyorker, toilet reader for geriatrics! Mousetraps. For fucking real? Golly, what'll they come up with next?

This is clearly another case of too many mad scientists, and not enough hunchbacks.

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