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Will the rat catcher let go if you catch a mouse?

Will the rat catcher let go if you catch a mouse?

We have a lot of rats in our factory.

Don't get me wrong, we are not a food-related factory. What we produce in our factory has nothing to do with food, but even so, rats in our factory are still quietly flooded.

At one meeting, a group of rats ran over to the top of the hoist above our heads, and hula ran over again. It caused a group of participants to follow the footsteps of the Rat Army with their heads held high.

That time, our boss was on fire, and Le asked the personnel department to solve the rat problem.

The personnel department rushed to find someone to solve the rat infestation, but then it was not resolved, it was said that because the professional rat extermination team had a high fee, so it gave up. Found the janitor uncle to kill the rats, the janitor uncle is not professional, can not catch them at all.

No way, I ended up buying a bunch of rat sticky stickers, distributing them to various departments, and setting them up in every corner in the hope of catching them.

The effect is also there, and often the little sister is frightened by the miserable-looking rats stuck to the mouse sticking. However, this method did not work for long, it may be that the rats have also learned to be smart, or it may be that the density of the mice has decreased, in short, the mouse stick can no longer catch the mice.

But don't think that the rats have been wiped out, that's impossible.

The obvious evidence is that the succulents I raise are often eaten by rats, and watching my flesh being spoiled into that way, I am angry and eager to catch them all.

But I didn't have much to do, and in a hurry, I thought that the mouse clip that had been used at home a long time ago seemed to be quite useful. So I searched on the Internet, and the result was that the mouse clip was not bought, but the mouse cage was bought. It is not expensive, 3 cages are less than 30 pieces, and the most important thing is that they can be reused, which can be said to be quite cost-effective.

After buying the cage, I loaded a little bait (the fritters left over from my colleagues' morning meals) and placed the cage in a corner where rats often haunted, not to ask me why I knew that rats were there, but to see dense rat droppings.

Whether the effect will be there, I don't know, quan as a dead horse as a living horse doctor.

On the first day, there was no movement.

The next day, there was no movement.

On the third day, my day, I really caught a giant rat.

It was really a giant rat, a gray-black clump, and a thin and long tail, which was very uncomfortable to describe. But I still found it very pleasant, and excitedly carried the rat cage containing the rats to the doorman's uncle and handed it over to him. The rats we used to catch with rat stickers were also handed over to him.

The next day, I took the cage back and continued with a new round of arrests.

Now it has been more than half a year since my first day of putting the rat cage, during which time I will catch a mouse from time to time, and there are more than twenty in total.

The rats caught were large and small, and the big ones were disposed of very painfully. Once I caught a particularly small one, it was a little cute, hiding in a cage and shivering, looking a little miserable. Colleagues said that the rat was too small to bear to kill it, and even the janitor uncle said that it was too small to be raised and killed.

Some people even joke that they put it in other departments and then catch it when they are raised.

Of course, this is just a joke, it is impossible to put it, and in the end it was taken away by the doorman uncle.

In the end, of course, it was not raised, but it was not deliberately killed, according to the uncle, it was placed in the sun, and it was sunburned in a short time, or it was too small.

I don't have any sense of lamentation, but I just think that even the most hateful things are a little cute when it was young, knowing that letting the tiger return to the mountain is a disaster, or will I sigh for its "untimely death". Is this human hypocrisy?

Every time a mouse was caught being disposed of, I would take the cage back, reload the bait, and conduct a new round of rat hunting. The dead young rat had no obstacle to my rat-catching behavior, not the slightest obstacle to our mouse-catching behavior.

Next time, I don't know what kind of rats were caught. Maybe it's a big rat, maybe it's a little mouse again.

If you catch a little mouse, what would you do to it?

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