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Mouse nesting locations in the Prius Prime

Discussion in 'Prime Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by Salamander_King, May 8, 2022.

  1. Stevewoods

    Stevewoods Senior Member

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    Kris did not fail me. I set out traps three nights in a row and caught a mouse every night. would have Thunk I would have caught all three the first night....but....setting traps again tonight. Hate to ruin their Fourth of July, but....
     
  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    this is still working great after a couple years:

    B005BUZL2Q

    even solved a few squirrels that were digging up our potted plants and chewing on hummingbird feeders
     
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  3. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    I would never use "poison baits". I understand that use of rodenticide is allowed and sometimes necessary to control really bad infestations to curtail the population down to a manageable level. But "poison baits" alone is usually not good enough. It has to be the IPM method which includes both habitat modification and exclusion. Besides, the use of "poison baits" has a major drawback. Pets, other non-pest wildlife, and humans can get sick if "poison baits" are ingested. The ingestion does not have to be direct, indirect ingestion and bio-accumulation of rodenticide in the system can harm foxes, owls, hawks, eagles, and other wildlife predators.

    Also for mouse controls, "poison baits" don't kill instantly, so they may die sometimes after, in an inaccessible area of the home. Or worse yet, they may bring the "poison baits" back to the nest and feed it to the whole family and they all die in the next where you can't find or get to. We have too many house pets and other non-pest wildlife that I want to protect. Don't have any small kids but that too is a concern.

    Here is more information on this topic: Rodenticides

    After over a month of inactivity, yesterday, I found two mice in the traps in the garage. Yep, there must be new immigration. Have not seen any new activity in the car (air filter or in the engine bay). I think it gets too hot in there to build a nest to raise a new family at this time of year. My data record shows it gets up to 110F on a hot day under the sun.
     
    #63 Salamander_King, Jul 5, 2022
    Last edited: Jul 5, 2022
  4. Solman636

    Solman636 Member

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    LOL...never thought I would get to the end of this thread on your battle with rodents. Or is it the end? Never has been for me. For years when living in a house with crawl space I tried everything and always lost out eventually to the rodents. Trapping til they were all caught for the winter usually worked. Recent years for the car has required similar, and I found this reusable live trap to work best of all I have tried. They are turned loose in town when I go to park for a walk.
    upload_2022-10-28_14-24-4.png
    Was trapping your ultimate answer? If my neighbors wouldn't shoot all the rat snakes they could help out, but I have found a rat snake resting on the inverter before too...but not in many years. Also, did you ever figure out where the white fluff is coming from. I worried it was interior, but I actually do not think they penetrated inside now that I see the whole construction of the cabin air system. Plus, it never smelled in there. Washing away the scent under the hood with soapy water in the engine compartment could be helpful if you have had a problem as they will return to the smell. Not sure you could ever get it all though. I still use the mint on a sock in a few places in engine area. But like you say an IPM approach is needed and obviously the trapping and vigilance must continue...or chewed wires and mayhem will ruin the Prius...or lawnmower...or house..etc. Good hunting!
     
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  5. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    Yes, everyone should use human traps.

    You could even build houses for them so that they won't reside in your Prius Prime.

     
  6. Solman636

    Solman636 Member

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    upload_2022-10-29_11-58-2.jpeg This pic is looking up over the cabin air filter slot. Some have blocked this easy access for mice with metal screen to keep them from nesting on the cabin air filter, but that procedure on youtube required taking dash off and disassembling the duct where this visible opening is in the picture below. There is no good way to block it with wire from the outside because the opening is inside a barely accessible cavity between firewall and the engine compartment. I removed the wiper arm and cowl, but you can't really get anything in there that would work from outside. One could imagine the perfectly molded hardware cloth fabrication could be forced into the upper part of this duct, but it would be hard to be exact??? We need the fresh air for defrosting, but the idea of the mouse dropping and trash in the cabin air box is pretty nasty...blowing all throughout the car. If I had a template of the exact dimensions of the shown opening I would be tempted to try the hardware cloth.
     
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  7. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Hmm. FWIW, With third gen, removing the wipers and cowl, it's relatively easy to install mesh over the cabin air intake.
     
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  8. Solman636

    Solman636 Member

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    Thanks Mendel! Perhaps on Gen 2 had I gone further and removed the wiper motors I could have angled a piece in there, but would have been hard to screw down the far side so didn't try. Besides, at that point I had not looked from the inside. From inside if one had just the right shape screen it could work to fill that hole.

    Strangely, my visiting mice may have come down in the cabin air intake, but they never left signs. Three times they have built a nest on top of the engine right in front of that fuse box in the middle. Wish I knew where they got the white fluff?? So far, trapping and vigilance has been best way, and at the same time they invade my eRider mower too which is also a problem to seal up so may as well just trap. Of course, if car is left still too long while away visiting etc. then wires will be chewed. There was a video on youtube that highlighted the use of a trail cam to capture what was going on around the area and help locate the point of entry around the house. So far, my camera never caught anything but neighborhood cats, possums and coons passing by. Haha... But it will soon turn cold. Then come the mice!! Where is the Nutcracker when you need him?...off dancing around with the mice! The green live traps work GREAT! A few pieces of walnut do the job. No blood. No suffering so long as you don't keep them in there too long. Easy to release. Easy to wash.

    I don't blame the mice for moving in. I like living in the Prius myself sometimes! Haha..
     
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  9. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    Well, trapping seems to have worked. At least for now. I have not seen any evidence of mouse activity in the engine bay or HVAC air intake above the cabin filter for the entire summer. I still have the reusable traps described in my comments #40 and #43 set up in and around the garage, a total of 14 of them, but nothing in the car or immediate vicinity of the car. The mouse activity was low during summer, but now weather getting cold, I have to be more vigilant about checking their activity.

    As for the white fluff found in the engine bay, I have not figured out where it came from. I am almost certain it did not come from the inside cabin, for I have not seen any evidence of rodents entering inside. My guess is the insulation material on the engine splash guard, but I am not sure.

    You can cover the opening of the air intake with a hard cloth from the engine bay side under the hood. If you search, you will find several YouTubes videos and a very good writeup on how to do this. But, since it requires removing the wiper and wiper cowl to get to the air intake, it was a bit more involved than the rear quarter panel vent opening fix I posted in the linked comment below. Instead, I just used a wire cloth to cover the cabin filter housing. This does not prevent mice to enter the HVAC air intake but prevents them from chewing up the cabin filter and making a cozy nest on top of the filter. So far, it seems to be working. I have not seen mice trying to build a nest there anymore. I am checking the filter condition and any evidence of mouse activity in the HVAC duct regularly.

    More on Mice... Prius Prime | PriusChat
     
    #69 Salamander_King, Nov 4, 2022
    Last edited: Nov 4, 2022
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  10. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    Well, the cold weather is settling in Up-North where I live. During warmer months, I did not find any mouse activities in and around the car, garage, and house. Now, it is getting cold, and they are looking for a cozy, warm winter rental.

    I just checked the air filter, which is protected by the hardware cloth, and found evidence of rodent activity. I am sure they tried to cut through the wire to build a nest but failed.

    upload_2022-11-24_11-44-37.png

    Looking under the hood, I did not find obvious signs of their nesting or damages caused by them. But clearly, the rodent-repellent bags I placed there had no effect on deterring them. Whatever it was, though most likely the deer mouse I have been trapping around the house, nibbled through the bag thinking it may be edible.

    OK, I got to be vigilant about checking from now on throughout winter.

    upload_2022-11-24_11-43-58.png
     
    #70 Salamander_King, Nov 24, 2022
    Last edited: Nov 24, 2022
  11. jerrymildred

    jerrymildred Senior Member

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  12. Chris HV

    Chris HV Member

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    Interesting conversation, and great writeup Kris.

    Here are a few observations on the subject, coming from a lifetime of battles with rodents of all sizes.

    Background: this all started on family farms infested by mice and rats who were destroying grain rooms. I currently live out in the boonies in conditions not too dissimilar to the OP (Mr. Mouse King !) Our 150+ year farmhouse is surrounded by several outbuildings but for one reason or another our cars (2018 PP, 2010 Gen3.4, etc.) sleep outside. No rodent damage to our Toyotas yet (black snakes do climb into the engine but they ain't got no teeth... hehehe!) but I did find serious damage in another vehicle a few years back.)

    Here we go:
    1) So... mice will stay away from a trap or whatever if a human touched it? OH REALLY? Then why do they live inside our homes, crawl all over our pantries, countertops, drawers, etc. ALL OF WHICH "stink of human"? And this must be some real stinkerooney for them since they have such an extraordinary sense of smell.
    Seriously, this is one the most absurd things I have ever heard... 200% with you here Kris!

    2) The ONLY time a rodent crawls back inside a wall or in a basement, dies, rots and stinks up the place is if he was poisoned with bait, NOT if he was PROPERLY trapped.

    3) I can see why Kris would prefer the fancy Victor trap but honestly the standard ones are way cheaper (if memory serves, we paid about 2 bucks for a box of 10 a few years back) and they are just as effective IF you make this simple mod', which I discovered by accident many years ago: insert the tip of a flat screwdriver, or a strong knife, at the very end of the "food holder" (where it curls back into the metal strip, and open that into a roughly 3/16" space. You now have enough room to one, really push your bait in there (I use smelly but softig cheese like young VT cheddar) into that hole, and two, mash a thin coat of some cheese on top of the food holder to "make it one" with the cheese inside. The mouse now thinks he's got no choice but to take a big bite and he gets slammed even if the trap has not been hair-triggered. .

    4) There's nothing easier and cleaner than releasing a dead mouse from a trap. Here is how to do it: grab the trap, step out 50 feet into some shubbery (or in open terrain if you know you have plenty of birds of prey), grab the trap by the opposite end to the mouse, release the trap tension and the mouse falls right off. DONE! Mother Nature will take care of the rest.

    5) Never "clean" a trap! The more mousey smell it has, the more mice you will catch (assuming above modification of course.) Think of that trap now having TWO baits...

    6) BY FAR the most efficient rodent killers are foxes, members of the mink family, hawks, and best of the best, OWLS. Have a gander at this beautiful documentary for a very small sample of what they can do:

    Here our "dear neighbors" the Mennonite farmers (aka the Monsanto Monsters) have absolutely devastated the owl populations over the last couple decades but hopefully, SK doesn't have to contend with this type of ravage. If that's the case, build as many potential nesting sites on and around your property as you can (local ornithologists would probably be happy to give you a hand!)
     
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  13. jerrymildred

    jerrymildred Senior Member

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    All six points, spot on with my experiences having lived in rural Ohio amid the soybean fields, @Chris HV.
     
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  14. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    Thanks for the pointers. After I learned the comeback of the mice to my the 2021 PP which was the car that initiated me to start this thread, I came to the conclusion that fighting against nature is a futile proposition. I can't irradicate the deer mice population in my backyard. There is no 100% sure rodent-proof method for my car. I sold the car. Now, they have no soy wires to munch and no cozy nesting box to rest.

    I think you are correct in that mice are attracted by the smell of previous inhabitants (dead or alive). In my case, if the car has been infested by mice before then they will come back eventually. And it is almost impossible to stop them.

    Well, I don't know if the Ford is less attractive than Toyota, but so far in the last ~18 years of living out in the boonies, the 2021 PP was the first and only car that attracted rodents. I may find a similar problem with our new Ford. But this new car has no previous signs and trails of rodent pioneers. I am hoping that alone is good enough to keep them away for the next three years.
     
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