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Smart Mouse Trap - Humane Mousetrap |  | Brand: Humane Mousetrap Category: Kitchen
Buy New: $11.19 as of 11/25/2009 11:43 CST details
New (3) from $11.19
Seller: Action Packaged, Inc. Rating: 136 reviews
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 3.2 x 2.6
Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Features:
| • | No Poison or Glue | | • | Safe Around Children and Pets | | • | Reusable Humane No Kill Mouse Trap | | • | Endorsed by Humane Societies and Animal Rights Organizations in the U.S. and Worldwide. | | • | An Effective, Patented Mouse Trap |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This Humane Mouse Trap is perfect for all animal lovers. The Smart Mouse Trap senses when the mouse enters to retrieve the bait and snaps the door shut. The little critter will stay in the trap enjoying his treat until you come and release him in a safe place.
To use this easy "no kill" mousetrap simply place a "saltine" cracker in the bait holder, set the trap and check frequently (make sure you check daily or you may starve a trapped mouse). Take the live mouse still in the trap to a wooded or brushy area and open the door and set the little guy free. Escape is delayed until the mouse chews through the cracker. This delay avoids contact between the mouse and the trap user and gives the mouse a little snack to keep him nourished for a while.
The Smart Mouse Trap can be cleaned and reused as many times as needed. You'll be thrilled with this quick and humane mouse control.
The trap is made of green see-through Kodar plastic & two stainless steel springs work the trap door. Measures 3" x 7" x 2.5". Comes with 1 mouse trap with instructions and booklet about trapping smart mice and mouseproofing your home.
Endorsed by humane societies and animal rights organizations in the U.S. and worldwide.
Makes a great gift for animal lovers.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 136
I think it is too short November 16, 2009 P. Kline I fed our mouse several meals with this "trap". I think the problem is that the mouse can reach the bait without going all the way in and putting enough weight on the lever to spring the trap. If it were about an inch longer, I suspect it would work properly. Or, it could be something with the latch, but that doesn't appear to be the case. Anyway, it did not work at all for me.
This baby catches 'em. November 4, 2009 PI audiobook nut (New York) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I've tried all kinds of mouse traps including some advertised as humane which really weren't. This trap not only catches mice better than any other trap I've tried, but also allows you to release the mouse unharmed and without touching any part of the trap that the mouse has come in contact with. I bought two traps and the first night I caught two mice. Same thing the next night. I caught at least one mouse each day for about a week, then one every other day, and finally we are mouse free. I also found the hole that they were using to gain entry and plugged it up so hopefully that is the end of the mouse problem. One thing that you have to do though, is check the trap at least twice a day. Even though the trap is ventilated, mice are actually delicate creatures and will die fairly quickly from starvation or anxiety of being trapped. I got a kick out of the instructions on the bottom of the trap that says to release the mouse in " an area where mice are needed" - where ever that is.
There can be no better trap! November 2, 2009 Eric (Bangor, ME) I made the leap from snap traps to this Smart Mouse Trap at least a year ago and purchased my first one - and since that purchase I haven't found the need to even try any of the other humane traps out there. Without fail it worked like a charm. Mouse after mouse, morning after morning release from the confines of the trap and my house back into the wild. We had put the trap away for the summer, but now that cold weather is setting in again the mice are coming back in, but out came the trap and each morning we've found another mouse. Works great. Cleans easily (face it, you'd soil yourself if you got caught in a big green box too!). Of all the mice we've caught, only one has bothered to stop long enough to chew on the cracker/peanut butter bait - most just squeeze out and are gone as soon as the coast is clear.
Buy this one November 2, 2009 Roland Rahn (Dortmund Deutschland) On a thursday morning, I realized that I had an uninvited little grey guest in my apartment. In the afternoon, I tried it with a do-it-yourself trap (placing a ramp leading to a canister; On top of the ramp, there was a tube with some cheese - it didn't work.
On friday morning, I ordered 4 mouse traps from Amazon with overnight delivery. On Saturday, I placed the traps. On sunday morning, this trap had worked.
I made a small trip to a nearby park and released my little grey friend. The last I saw of him/her was how he/she climbed on a tree - never thought that a mouse could do that with such a speed.
One word of caution:
I regarded it as inhuman to let this creature be trapped in that small trap and released him/her into a large plastic canister. The walls where more than 11 inch heigh. The little acrobat started to jump and it was close. If I would have chosen a smaller canister, I guess that this little acrobat would have escaped.
Amazing! October 30, 2009 Mike (Brooklyn, NY USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I am not a person who has alot of experience catching rodents. In fact, I have none. I have lived in a garden apartment in Brooklyn for the last 5 1/2 years, and contrary to what you might imagine, we have never had a mouse or rat in our apartment (at least not to my knowledge). That all changed this past week: We removed our sliding screen door to have the screen replaced and one recent fall evening my wife cracked the door anyway to get a little fresh air. Later that night, I spied a little brown field mouse sniffing around in the corner of my living room. He disappeared before I could do anything about it, but I realized I needed to take action. I immediately thought of the usual mouse traps: the snapping wire kind in all the old cartoons and the glue traps. I was not anxious to use either (I still remember a friend's horrible story about not knowing what to do once he caught a mouse with a glue trap and having to think about how to kill it -- no thank you!).
So here was my experience: I got the Smart Mouse Trap last night. I read the booklet. I put in a cracker smeared with some peanut butter as instructed. I tried to set the trap so the catch was just barely set, again, as instructed. I scattered in some granola and a crumbled up cheddar goldfish cracker (the mouse had shown an interest in them during the first night of its stay with us), as suggested in the instructions. And I put the trap down in my living room behind a speaker in the area I had first seen him. This morning, I went to check the trap and - bingo! - a cute little brown field mouse quietly waiting for me, completely unharmed. I was amazed. I took the little guy to Prospect Park and set him free and he scampered off through the leaves. What a thoroughly pleasant experience! No killing, no death, no guilt, no mess. I highly recommend!
Now tonight I'm going to reset it, just in case I'm wrong and there are more little guys running around . . .
Showing reviews 1-5 of 136
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