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There’s a moose loose aboot this hoose

Well, actually more than one!. In a half-hearted go at replacing and re-designing my en-suite I prepared the way by lifting the flooring and doing all the necessary demolition work. As you do at my age, you quickly loose interest, so the scene of devastation sat for a week before I summoned the get-go to finish things off. In between time it became obvious that we had suffered the intrusion of a horde of unwanted house guests. It soon became apparent that they had somehow got into the voids below the suspended floor and took it as invitation to join us in the rooms above when I lifted sections of said floor. Can’t say I blame them given the current weather but whilst I might seem flippant, my good lady is, to say the least, beyond distressed. 

So the floor is down again but that has trapped the wee buggers in our living spaces. I have spent much time setting traps and dispatching the victims one by one. Why am I telling you this? Well I built this house way back in 1990 and as a relatively young, go-ahead electrical contractor I installed cabling for just about every conceivable system from fire alarms to whole house music systems. Back then I never thought one jot about rodent intrusion. If I had to do it again there would be no voids unless totally unavoidable. There would be no hidden routes to get between floor levels or rooms yet this was something I deliberately did to facilitate future service installation. If  I had to do it again whether reasonable or not the designer would declare an external influence code of AL2!
Parents
  • Given the previous damage, I was very careful to run the cables in Daughter's kitchen loft space along the walls and up and over the rafters. Theory is that the mice may run along the cables, but they won't want to eat them.


    Best explanation that I have found is that rodents only eat cables if they are in the way. They are not eating, they are trying to find their way through. So if they are burrowing under the insulation, they will go for the cables.


    Added benefit of my installation is that Daughter could put in as much insulation as she liked.
Reply
  • Given the previous damage, I was very careful to run the cables in Daughter's kitchen loft space along the walls and up and over the rafters. Theory is that the mice may run along the cables, but they won't want to eat them.


    Best explanation that I have found is that rodents only eat cables if they are in the way. They are not eating, they are trying to find their way through. So if they are burrowing under the insulation, they will go for the cables.


    Added benefit of my installation is that Daughter could put in as much insulation as she liked.
Children
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