After the flooding, Pierrefonds residents coping with unwanted rodent house guests - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:13 PM | Calgary | -5.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

After the flooding, Pierrefonds residents coping with unwanted rodent house guests

Pierrefonds resident Michael McGregor lives near the area that flooded this spring. When he recently noticed things in his kitchen were being displaced, he thought mice may have settled in. Then he found two foot-long rats.

Critters seem to have settled into 1 resident's home after escaping area's flooded sewers

Pierrefonds resident Michael McGregor thinks the flood, which didn't directly affect his house, may have sent rats into it. He found two under his kitchen counter after setting traps. (Peter Pearson/flickr cc)

Pierrefonds resident Michael McGregornoticed he might have some unsolicited roommates a couple weeks ago when objects in his kitchen were being "moved around and things were coming out of my garbage."

Since the borough has a composting program, there wasn't much food inMcGregor'spail, but the parchment paper soaked in oil he'd used to roast had been pulled out.

He thought it was mice,"but when Iput out a large sticky trap out, it disappeared, so Iknew Iwas dealing with a larger animal,"McGregortold CBC Montreal's DaybreakWednesday morning.

On Saturday, after he laid traps,McGregorsays hecaught two rats that were almost a foot long.

"I wasn't impressed," he said.

The flooding in Pierrefonds last month. Resident Michael McGregor says the flood may have stayed, but rats have found refuge in his and his neighbours' homes. (Conrad Fournier/Radio-Canada)

What to do if you have them, too

The rats' new frontier also includes three other homes in the des Sources Boulevard area, McGregor said. His home did not flood.

He doesn't think they came directly from the sewer because of a recently installed clap in his system. He suspects they came in through vents from his furnace or dryer.

McGregorthinks the critters settled into hisPierrefondshome after escaping the area's flooded sewers, a theory Montreal exterminatorSteveBilodeauagrees with.

"[The rats] are going to search for sources of food and they will find some. From what Iunderstand, they've already found this gentleman's house," he said, referring to McGregor.

If you encounter a rat in your home, get away,Bilodeausaid, adding rats don't typically attack humans but could jump at usif they feel threatened.

"Do not provoke it."

He said to follow McGregor's method and set traps, and to then dispose of the rodent in the garbage.

With files from CBC Montreal's Daybreak