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[email protected] November 27th 07 10:16 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks

HeyBub[_2_] November 27th 07 10:33 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Next time think cat.



[email protected] November 27th 07 10:45 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Nov 27, 7:33 pm, "HeyBub" wrote:
wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Next time think cat.


Thanks for the advice but it does not answer my question.

Dan Espen November 27th 07 10:47 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
writes:

I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Surprised you smell it at all.
A rat can stink for a month but a mouse should only last a few days.

Oren November 27th 07 10:50 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 16:33:52 -0600, "HeyBub" wrote:

wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Next time think cat.


Somehow, I knew that was coming ;-)

BobK207 November 27th 07 11:00 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Nov 27, 2:16 pm, wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks


The unpleasant odor will go away when he's completely "eaten" or dried
out; which ever happens first.

Think "mass of dead body" there is only so much "food" there.

Depending on local weather conditions (your level of sensitively to
smells) I'd guess a week (or two at the most.)

Mice are about 30g .... about an ounce, not much food there.

cheers
Bob

Oren November 27th 07 11:23 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 14:45:09 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Nov 27, 7:33 pm, "HeyBub" wrote:
wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Next time think cat.


Thanks for the advice but it does not answer my question.


Leave the 4X8 sheet rock down; until you cannot smell the dead mouse.
Think cat next time.

[email protected] November 28th 07 01:33 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Nov 27, 11:19 pm, "SteveB" wrote:
wrote in message

...

I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Thanks


Yes, the smell will go away. Eventually.

Look at Victor Tin Cats. A live trap that doesn't have the problem poison
has caused you. I'm curious. What did you think would happen to them?

Steve


I reside in a rural area with some feilds around. I baited the
perimeter (sp) of the home outside. It's a fairly old home and I have
sealed all areas (I think). The basement sump has a clay pipe for
overflow if the power fails or the sump fails. Tracing the pipe by
guesstimate it's opening some 30 feet from the house was unscreened. I
figure they might have gotten in this way, perhaps or came in with the
firewood.

HeyBub[_2_] November 28th 07 02:15 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
wrote:
On Nov 27, 7:33 pm, "HeyBub" wrote:
wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there
is a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my
basement but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I
removed one 4x8 sheet of drywall where I thought they might be -
but no. Will the odor leave when they fully decompose? Any time
frame on this? It's not an unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Next time think cat.


Thanks for the advice but it does not answer my question.


Oh, okay. One mouse (depending on the weather), three days to a week.

But, you've put out bait. That means there could be a steady stream of
rodents eating the bait and dying in your inaccessible places.



SteveB November 28th 07 02:19 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 

wrote in message
...
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks


Yes, the smell will go away. Eventually.

Look at Victor Tin Cats. A live trap that doesn't have the problem poison
has caused you. I'm curious. What did you think would happen to them?

Steve



[email protected] November 28th 07 02:48 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 16:33:52 -0600, "HeyBub" wrote:

wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Next time think cat.


Meow meow meow meow meow meow meow meow meow meow meow......
I'm thinking cat !!!!!!

Meow meow meow meow meow meow meow .........

[email protected] November 28th 07 03:01 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 14:16:33 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks


I sure wouldn't rip down a whole sheet of drywall because of a mouse.
Yes, the smell will go away. In fact I just found a mouse trap behind
my water heater with nothing but a skeleton and some fur. Probably
has been there for at least a year. I did notice a foul odor once
during the hot summer but thought it was sewer gas from the septic and
I knew my wax ring on the toilet was bad. I replaced the ring and
never smelled it after that. Maybe it was the mouse because the water
heater is in a closet next to the bathroom.

In your case, if that ceiling is all drywall, replace that sheet and
before you finish, spray a whole can of air freshner up there. Next
time, drill a 1/2" hole and use that same air freshner. Better yet,
use traps, or a cat and avoid the poison indoors.

Now here's something to think about.
On a scale from 1 to 10, (10 is REAL DEAD), how dead is this mouse?
What was his or her name.
Was it a male or female?
How old was it?
Is it's family grieving?
Was a proper funeral held?
Did it's soul go to heaven or hell?
Was it a smoker?
Did it shop at Home Depot?
Did it have an ebay account?
Where did it work?
How much money did it have in it's bank account?
Who is the next of kin?
Who inherited it's estate?

By the time you answer all these questions, the smell should be gone.


[email protected] November 28th 07 03:04 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 19:23:00 -0800, "SteveB"
wrote:


wrote in message
...
On Nov 27, 11:19 pm, "SteveB" wrote:
wrote in message

...

I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks

Yes, the smell will go away. Eventually.

Look at Victor Tin Cats. A live trap that doesn't have the problem
poison
has caused you. I'm curious. What did you think would happen to them?

Steve


I reside in a rural area with some feilds around. I baited the
perimeter (sp) of the home outside. It's a fairly old home and I have
sealed all areas (I think). The basement sump has a clay pipe for
overflow if the power fails or the sump fails. Tracing the pipe by
guesstimate it's opening some 30 feet from the house was unscreened. I
figure they might have gotten in this way, perhaps or came in with the
firewood.


If a mouse can get his head through a hole, he can get the rest of his body,
too. That's about the size of a dime. Unless a house is built today, and
special attention and a lot of cash is spent on that aspect, it is
impossible to keep mice out. Or they just chew a hole through somewhere.

They sound like a much larger animal when chewing through wood in the dark.

I'm tellin ya. Look at the Tin Cats. You won't keep them down in the
fields, but you can get the ones that make it to the house. And if you're
the humane type, just take them all for a five mile ride. I'd dye a few,
though, just to find out if they make it back to their original home.

Steve


Ummmmmmmmm......... ROTFL
How do you dye a mouse????? :)


jmagerl November 28th 07 03:15 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
3 days for a dead mouse odor to disappear? I wish. My mice take about 2
weeks to de-odorfy. These are standard mice not rats. Maybe a air ionizer
cleaner will destroy some of the odor during those 2 weeks.

I get at least 1 dead mouse/odor a year in the house. Usually just before
the holidays. On the plus side, no one wants to come over for holiday meals
and if they do, they dont stay long.

Get a cat? I have one and he's dragged in more mice than he's dragged out

wrote in message
...
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks




SteveB November 28th 07 03:23 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 

wrote in message
...
On Nov 27, 11:19 pm, "SteveB" wrote:
wrote in message

...

I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.


Thanks


Yes, the smell will go away. Eventually.

Look at Victor Tin Cats. A live trap that doesn't have the problem
poison
has caused you. I'm curious. What did you think would happen to them?

Steve


I reside in a rural area with some feilds around. I baited the
perimeter (sp) of the home outside. It's a fairly old home and I have
sealed all areas (I think). The basement sump has a clay pipe for
overflow if the power fails or the sump fails. Tracing the pipe by
guesstimate it's opening some 30 feet from the house was unscreened. I
figure they might have gotten in this way, perhaps or came in with the
firewood.


If a mouse can get his head through a hole, he can get the rest of his body,
too. That's about the size of a dime. Unless a house is built today, and
special attention and a lot of cash is spent on that aspect, it is
impossible to keep mice out. Or they just chew a hole through somewhere.

They sound like a much larger animal when chewing through wood in the dark.

I'm tellin ya. Look at the Tin Cats. You won't keep them down in the
fields, but you can get the ones that make it to the house. And if you're
the humane type, just take them all for a five mile ride. I'd dye a few,
though, just to find out if they make it back to their original home.

Steve



Malcolm Hoar November 28th 07 08:44 AM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
In article , wrote:

Now here's something to think about.
On a scale from 1 to 10, (10 is REAL DEAD), how dead is this mouse?
What was his or her name.
Was it a male or female?
How old was it?
Is it's family grieving?
Was a proper funeral held?
Did it's soul go to heaven or hell?
Was it a smoker?
Did it shop at Home Depot?
Did it have an ebay account?
Where did it work?
How much money did it have in it's bank account?
Who is the next of kin?
Who inherited it's estate?


And, more importantly, who is responsible for it's
outstanding credit card balances?

You're not gonna tell us it lived in your house and
didn't have at least one Amex, Visa and Mastercard!

--
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| Malcolm Hoar "The more I practice, the luckier I get". |
|
Gary Player. |
|
http://www.malch.com/ Shpx gur PQN. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

[email protected] November 28th 07 05:34 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
On Wed, 28 Nov 2007 03:15:05 GMT, "jmagerl"
wrote:

3 days for a dead mouse odor to disappear? I wish. My mice take about 2
weeks to de-odorfy. These are standard mice not rats. Maybe a air ionizer
cleaner will destroy some of the odor during those 2 weeks.

I get at least 1 dead mouse/odor a year in the house. Usually just before
the holidays. On the plus side, no one wants to come over for holiday meals
and if they do, they dont stay long.

Get a cat? I have one and he's dragged in more mice than he's dragged out

wrote in message
...
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks



Sounds like you cat was a defective model. There may be a recall
notice for your model of cat. Check the US Consumer Product Safety
Commission's website at
http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prerel.html.


Frank November 28th 07 08:11 PM

Mice (mouse) in house - dead
 
wrote:
I made the mistake of baiting mice. They have since died and there is
a real bad odor. They seem to be in the ceiling area of my basement
but am not 100% sure. I don't want to do a tear out. I removed one 4x8
sheet of drywall where I thought they might be - but no. Will the odor
leave when they fully decompose? Any time frame on this? It's not an
unbearable odor - just unpleasant.

Thanks


I bait but have never smelled a dead mouse. I've found some old
dessicated mice in traps but they did not smell. I would imagine that
if blow flies got to the dead mouse before it mummified, then there
would be an odor as the maggots do their work. Eventually odor will
clear as cadaverine and the odorants committed from a corpse are
volatile organic compounds.


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