Patience. When you find the network of tunnels, obviously set your traps inline with those. Last season I got one with a spade by watching the tunnel move under my grass. I hate miles enough to wait for them.
Situation awareness is defined as a continuous extraction of environmental information, integration of this information with previous knowledge to form a coherent mental picture in directing further perception and anticipating future events. Simply put, situational awareness mean knowing what is going on around you.
Posts: 7897 | Location: Around Lake Tapps, Wa | Registered: September 29, 2005
Originally posted by RHINOWSO: But I stuck the hose down multiple holes and ran it almost all day.
The little bastards killed my apple tree last summer. Chewed right through the roots and it fell over. (Pretty sure it was moles, but might've been chipmunks or some other tunneling vermin).
I found a small hole next to the tree and stuck the hose down there. Left it on for the better part of the day and it never filled up. There must be a mile of tunnels under that area.
Funny thing is, I've got a peach tree about ten feet away that they haven't touched...yet.
________________________________________________________ "Great danger lies in the notion that we can reason with evil." Doug Patton.
Posts: 20865 | Location: Montana | Registered: November 01, 2010
Assault rat poison. It's $75 for a 1gal bucket of bait packs, but it works. I split a bait pack into about 3 spots at tunnel branches & usually they are gone in a day or 2 if I find an active route.
Posts: 3340 | Location: IN | Registered: January 12, 2007
Moles are forever, they existed before dinosaurs and, along with cockroaches, will survive the sun going supernova. Love them, embrace them, they're warm, fuzzy and cute in their hideous way. God made them for a reason.
Ripley, mole rancher
Set the controls for the heart of the Sun.
Posts: 8624 | Location: Flown-over country | Registered: December 25, 2008
Yes they like grubs, but their main food source is earthworms and you don't want to/can't get rid of earthworms.
Buy a shit-load of Talpirid Mole Bait and keep putting a few in new and active borrows. Eventually you'll get them. It might take a few seasons.
Water down the hole does not work on moles as it does with gophers and ground squirrels et al. Moles live their entire life underground (they are pretty much blind) and have many escape routes and drainage designs too keep them relatively dry and safe. And unless you are putting water down their living quarters (way down deep) you are just spreading water through their surface tunnels. Their den is most likely some distance from active burrows and near impossible to pin point.
Men fight for liberty and win it with hard knocks. Their children, brought up easy, let it slip away again, poor fools. And their grandchildren are once more slaves.
-D.H. Lawrence
Posts: 11524 | Location: Fort Worth, Texas | Registered: February 07, 2007
My exterminator used some form of white granules a tad smaller than a BB. He spreads them out and I water them in real good. Got rid of the moles because it got rid of their food source according to him. It worked great since we had a bunch destroying our front yard. Going on 6 yrs now.
Posts: 5363 | Location: basement | Registered: April 06, 2007
I have caught 6 so far this yr. 3 on the stab traps and 3 in a loop type. They are coming from my neighbors yard.
NRA Life member NRA Certified Instructor "Our duty is to serve the mission, and if we're not doing that, then we have no right to call what we do service" Marcus Luttrell
About 50 years ago my folks bought a new house and soon after moving in the parents had moles. Grandpa gives my dad some arsenic ( grandpa was a pharmacist since before ww2, I wasn’t there, he’s long deceased now) and tells my dad roll that goodness up into a few hamburger meatballs and place in the mole holes. voila no rodent problem in 50 years since.
I've had good luck with Tomcat brand mole bait worms. Not cheap, but effective. As soon as I see a mound I check the whole yard for trails and feed the little bastards all they want. YMMV
"Common sense is wisdom with its sleeves rolled up." -Kyle Farnsworth "Freedom of Speech does not guarantee freedom from consequences." -Mike Rowe "Democracies aren't overthrown, they're given away." -George Lucas
Posts: 6880 | Location: IL, due south of the Arch | Registered: April 20, 2005
I have found that profuse profanity helps. (They supposedly have tiny delicate ears). Play pretty much any Samuel L. Jackson movie loudly outside. After he drops several MFs they are gone for sure...
Posts: 1512 | Location: PA | Registered: March 15, 2009
I’ve had good results with Amdro Gopher Gasser or similar products. I have used several brands. They look like little sticks of dynamite but do not explode...only emit strong fumes that wipe the moles out. Just either stick in entrance or create an opening somewhere in the tunnel and insert them.
You've got to know what to do when you don't know what to do.
Posts: 364 | Location: SML-VA | Registered: November 29, 2013
I have tried everything under the sun to rid of those little bastards. As a last hail Mary I tried this stuff. I put it down in early March and have yet to see a tunnel this year. I plan on doing another application in July.
Posts: 5479 | Location: Pittsburgh, PA, USA | Registered: February 27, 2001
Find a straight section of tunnel without roots around it. Flatten about 12" of tunnel and push the trap all the way down in the center of the flattened area, making sure the jaws move freely. I also put a couple pieces of flat mulch under the trigger foot to ensure it springs the trap as soon as the dirt start to move. Then poke some air holes on either side of the trap in the un-flattened section of tunnel. If a mole is nearby the trap will kill it that evening.
Don't waste your money on the plunger style mole traps. I have several of those that do not work. The moles will trip the trap but the spring isn't strong enough to drive the spike deep enough/fast enough to actually kill the mole. Plus they bend very easily making them even more prone to failure since they bind up.
I've found two dead moles on the lawn so far this year, a few days apart, within ten feet of each other. I'm guessing the first one passed from over population, the second of a broken heart.
Set the controls for the heart of the Sun.
Posts: 8624 | Location: Flown-over country | Registered: December 25, 2008
Moles used to turn our yard into a motocross track. I tried poison worms, organic treatments, etc., but was always chasing them and never getting in front of them. Then a neighbor suggested something that they had purchased off of Amazon called Mole Sonic Repellent. It is a small rechargeabled device that you place in your yard to repel moles. It worked great for me. No moles for the last 2 years and they only cost about $10 each. Just make sure you remove them before mowing.
Posts: 2223 | Location: United States | Registered: February 13, 2006
Originally posted by Censored: Moles used to turn our yard into a motocross track. I tried poison worms, organic treatments, etc., but was always chasing them and never getting in front of them. Then a neighbor suggested something that they had purchased off of Amazon called Mole Sonic Repellent. It is a small rechargeabled device that you place in your yard to repel moles. It worked great for me. No moles for the last 2 years and they only cost about $10 each. Just make sure you remove them before mowing.
I bought one of those about 10 years ago. I didn't have it long enough to know if it worked. It made an audible sound every so often (the "repellent"); about a week after I put it in, some dog must have heard it and come into the yard. It must not have liked the sound - I came home from work and found it destroyed.
"If Gun Control worked, Chicago would look like Mayberry, not Thunderdome" - Cam Edwards
Posts: 16688 | Location: Under the Boot of Tyranny in Connectistan | Registered: February 02, 2005