Once spring hits in Chicagoland, everybody heads outside. You’re clearing out the beds, laying down fresh mulch, getting the bird feeder going again, maybe finally tackling that compost situation you’ve been ignoring since October. The problem is that some of those springtime habits, especially anything to do with the garden, are also giving the local mouse population a leg up.
Fresh mulch looks great, and it’s important for things like retaining moisture, regulating soil temperature, and keeping weeds down. Mice think it’s great too, for almost the same reasons. Thick mulch beds piled up against your foundation give mice exactly what they’re looking for: cover and a staging ground just inches from your home’s exterior walls. Make sure you keep mulch at least six inches away from your foundation.
Bird feeders are great (except that sometimes they’re not). You’re feeding the cardinals, but you’re also feeding the mice. Seeds that fall from feeders accumulate on the ground and become a reliable, high-calorie food source that draws rodents in from the surrounding area. Once they’re in your yard regularly, your home is the next stop.
If you’re running a feeder, keep it away from the house, use a baffle to help cut down on how many seeds hit the ground, and clean up regularly.
A compost bin is a wonderful thing. It’s also an all-you-can-eat buffet with no cover charge if you’re a mouse. Improperly managed compost (think bins without secure lids or bottoms, or piles that include meat, dairy, or cooked food) is a big problem. Keep your compost in a sealed bin with a tight lid and a rodent-resistant base, and be disciplined about what goes in.
Spring cleanup also means dealing with last season’s dead plants, leaf piles, stacked pots, and forgotten bags of soil. All of it creates places for mice to hide out and set up house.
None of this means you have to stop gardening. You just need to think about your yard the way mice do. Adjust a few habits, and you make the whole property a lot less appealing.
And if you’re seeing signs that the welcome mat’s already been used, Mice Mob Exterminators is ready to help. Contact us this spring to schedule an inspection before a small problem becomes a full-season headache.
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