A
Allan Adler
Guest
Jim Thompson <thegreatone@example.com> writes:
up a mechanical contraption that will hopefully tell me whether in fact
they are getting in that way.
either because it is way to difficult to move my own stuff out of the way
or because the apartment was designed so that certain fixtures simply can't
be moved and one can't see behind them.
At any rate, I might as well be optimistic. Before I found the first
mouse, I had no evidence that there were any mice in the apartment.
After I killed the first mouse, I had no evidence that there were any
longer any mice in the apartment. After I saw the second mouse in the
kitchen and watched it run out of the kitchen, I had more evidence
for hypothesis (A) than for hypothesis (B), where:
(A) Every mouse that has ever been in the kitchen has left.
(B) There are mice in the kitchen.
I have the entrance to the kitchen rigged so that a mouse should not be
able to enter it from outside without my finding out about it and, based
on it, no mice have passed through the kitchen door in weeks. That is where
all the food is and if a mouse doesn't go into the kitchen, it doesn't have
much reason to be in the apartment.
Mice are shrewd businessmice and they don't go where they don't have a
reason to go.
of maintaining a cat would quickly exceed the $30 that I've set as a limit
for solving this problem.
That sounds like a very sensible idea. However, first I'm going to rigSeems like some good weather stripping application to the front door
is in order.
up a mechanical contraption that will hopefully tell me whether in fact
they are getting in that way.
Unfortunately, most of the likely places to look are inaccessible to me,I'd also check throughout the apartment for holes in the walls... like
inside kitchen cabinets, etc.
either because it is way to difficult to move my own stuff out of the way
or because the apartment was designed so that certain fixtures simply can't
be moved and one can't see behind them.
At any rate, I might as well be optimistic. Before I found the first
mouse, I had no evidence that there were any mice in the apartment.
After I killed the first mouse, I had no evidence that there were any
longer any mice in the apartment. After I saw the second mouse in the
kitchen and watched it run out of the kitchen, I had more evidence
for hypothesis (A) than for hypothesis (B), where:
(A) Every mouse that has ever been in the kitchen has left.
(B) There are mice in the kitchen.
I have the entrance to the kitchen rigged so that a mouse should not be
able to enter it from outside without my finding out about it and, based
on it, no mice have passed through the kitchen door in weeks. That is where
all the food is and if a mouse doesn't go into the kitchen, it doesn't have
much reason to be in the apartment.
Mice are shrewd businessmice and they don't go where they don't have a
reason to go.
I like cats but my lease doesn't allow me to have pets. Also, the costOne week later my wife's parents sent her cat (our first Burmese) and
that was the end of mouse problems.
of maintaining a cat would quickly exceed the $30 that I've set as a limit
for solving this problem.