The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

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Hotel California: Vole Edition

Although we had considerable success trapping voles during the last half of the 2024 gardening season, Mary found a description of what might be a better technique: a box with small entrance holes taking advantage of rodent thigmotaxis: their tendency to follow walls. The writeup shows nicely made wood boxes, but I no longer have machinery capable of cutting arbitrarily large wood slabs into pieces.

I do, however, have a vast pile of cardboard boxes:

Vole Box - large
Vole Box – large

That’s a rat-size trap.

A smaller box has room for two mouse-size traps (one hidden on the left):

Vole Box - small
Vole Box – small

The general idea: plunk the box in a garden plot, arm the trap(s), close the lid, and eventually a vole will venture inside, whereupon wall-following leads to disaster. Apparently bait is optional, as wall-following inevitably takes them over the trap pedal. I won’t begrudge them a walnut or two, should bait become necessary.

Cardboard is obviously the wrong material for a box in an outdoor garden, but I figure they’ll survive long enough to show feasibility and I can deploy a lot of small boxes before having to conjure something more durable.

Yes, those are laser-cut rounded-rectangle holes: 30 mm and 40 mm, assuming voles care about such things.

Edit: More on voles.

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One response to “Hotel California: Vole Edition”

  1. Laser-Cut Vole Trap Boxes – The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning Avatar

    […] deployed low-effort vole trap boxes a few weeks ago, only to discover no voles checked in, most likely due to wintertime gardens […]