Humane Mouse Traps (Pack of 2)
Customer reviews
Showing 1-5 Of 13 Reviews
Miss beauty addicted Miss beauty addicted : 5.0 out of 5 stars Trap them and set them free
The media could not be loaded. ⛔️⚠️🐹🐁🐀🐭⚠️⛔️ SET OF 2 HUMANE MOUSE TRAPS ⛔️⚠️🐹🐁🐀🐭⚠️⛔️I noticed that we had mice in our flat. We live in a big, old Victorian house that has been made into 4 flats. There's been mice in the communal areas aswell. I'm also suspecting that they are in the other flats too. I wanted to deal with the problem as quickly as I could before it became out of control, so I ordered these traps. My friend went out and got some sticky traps while I waited for delivery. After seeing what sticky traps do I will never again in my life use them. They are so cruel and inhumane.These traps came packed in a brown cardboard box with a large sticker on the front that clearly says they are mouse traps. Inside the box you get an information leaflet and 2 mouse traps. The information leaflet is very helpful. It tells you exactly how to use them, what to put inside and how often to check them. The instructions are clear and easy to follow and there's photos showing you each step. The traps are individually wrapped in plastic. The traps are on the small side, made front transparent plastic material and feel nice and sturdy. You have a chamber at one end that lifts up and comes off. This is where you put the bait. They suggest peanut butter. It's abit tricky because you have to get the right amount of bait or the trap gets triggered and snaps shut. Once youve got the bait in you put the trap in a place you know the mice are using as the will use the same route more often than not. It does say in the leaflet that it may take up to a week to work. Mice are not silly and they will be spooked by something new in their environment. We caught the first mouse in less than a week and then I think 2 days after we caught a second. It's really easy to let them free you slide off the bait chamber and the mouse is free to run. So simple and easy to use and I'm not left feeling like an evil person because I've killed a living creature or made it suffer. Its amazing value for money because you can use these traps over and over again. They are well made and don't feel like they will break after a few uses. The plate the mouse walks on to get to the bait is really sensitive and I don't think the mouse would be able to go into the trap and not trigger it. I've read stories of rats walking along traps and taking bait and then walking off and the traps don't snap but this is very sensitive. They are easy to keep clean and easy enough to store away. They would be better if they was a little bit bigger and the bait chamber was bigger but apart from that I'm really happy with them. They are definitely a 5🌟 product that I am happy to recommend.





Paul V.: 5.0 out of 5 stars Humane mouse traps
Sadly we have a mouse in our garden shed but this humane mouse trap is grat for the job, safely caught and released back into the wild without any problems
Bluepeterwoman Bluepeterwoman : 5.0 out of 5 stars Worked first time where others have failed.
Came home from a holiday last month to evidence of mouse activity.Weirdly there was no sign of them having nibbled at any food packets, or even the fruit bowl, they had just chomped their way through several small succulent house-plants.This is the first time we have had a mouse problem in over 15 years.Last time we only managed to catch one, but an electronic plug in seemed to scare the rest away.So the first thing we did was to buy new plug-ins, presuming that the old plug-in was worn out after all that time.The activity did go down, but there was still evidence of at least one mouse still visiting each night.After a couple of weeks, (in case the reason it hadn't left was that it had babies, rather than being deaf), I tried setting the fancy galvanised metal humane trap we still had, which had worked well when we leant it to our daughter, but either they didn't trust it, or they were small enough to not trigger it.So I decided to try these smaller, lighter, traps because they looked as if a mouse might be a little less suspicious of them.They arrived in a plain box (Which is good if you don't want the neighbours freaking that you have a mouse problem). With clear instructions, including photos.They are simple to set; just pop some bait in and push down the trapdoor so it catches on the latch.It is easy to get the bait box/release hatch off, if you press it in slightly, near the bottom, where there are embossed lines, before sliding it up.Having said that there, are, clear instructions; I need to admit that I did not quite follow them to the letter myself.Firstly I couldn't see the point of the bait being in a separate compartment, (It seemed "unfair" to the mouse to taunt it with food once trapped, and I knew I would clean the whole thing anyway, because the mouse would leave droppings).Secondly it felt to me as if the pressure needed to spring the trap-door was maybe too much. So, I put a couple of greasy crumby cupcake cases in the bottom of the trap, and "weighted" the miniature springboard area, (the part that the mouse needs to step onto to trigger the trap not sure what else to call it), with a little piece cut off of a peanut, caramel, nougat chocolate bar. (The caramel sticks it onto the springboard nicely).I then put the trap near to where I'd seen most activity, in an open paper bag, which had fruit and veg waste that was destined for the compost heap in it. I pushed some green bean trimmings up near the door; not least because they resembled the leaves of the plants that had been eaten, but also to partly disguise the step up onto the platform.This morning there was a little mouse inside.I put the whole trap into a paper bag with shredded paper inside and went for a 6:30am drive, to wooded area, in the next county. The mouse did panic a bit when I lifted the trap out of the bag, but other than that it had been quite quiet. There is room inside for it to move around a bit (see photos of it at either end). When I let it out all the piece of chocolate bar was gone, and the paper had been chewed u[ too, so I felt better than if the bait had been in the bait end.I now need to repeat the process tonight and see if there are any more.




JB: 5.0 out of 5 stars Easy to use and set up, hoping these will remove the chasing around the house
Our cat has a habit of bringing in lots of mice particularly through the autumn. A knowing yowl comes upstairs while trying to sleep, then you lose half an hour chasing after a mouse with cup and cardboard.Chose these to try and leave out in and give the mouse chance to escape, and avoid the chasing.The construction is fine and they're simple to set up, the leaflet that comes with is clear and easy to understand. Have tested the mechanism by hand and seems sturdy.Won't know for sure how effective they are until we have another live one brought in, but would be unfair to prejudge while we wait.
Sargent Wilko: 5.0 out of 5 stars Easy to bait up, set, & safe to use in an aviary
I keep budgies, and the mice are constantly burrowing under the aviary/shed to get to the uneaten seed on the floor. I have used conventional 'killer traps' in the past but there is always the danger that one of my birds will land on the trap and set it off. These humane traps are perfect, as I don't have to cover them with a cardboard box the stop the budgies.They are very simple to bait up and set too, so I'm very happy with them.