I like how you are dealing with the problem. Give them a chance to find a new home but if they come back to yours... sorry.
Placing the live trap under some plywood or cardboard works well, even better if your trap has doors on each end so they can see through it. A can of tuna for bait and success in inevitable.
There was a comment in this thread about a car exhaust pipe to do in the visitor. Newer vehicles don't put out the same ingredients that make an animal sleepy as older vehicles. My dad and I did this to a few strays on the farm. A couple minutes of idling with his truck and the critter was done. After a much longer time idling with mine, we opened the trap and kitty bolted out of there without even stumbling.
Placing the live trap under some plywood or cardboard works well, even better if your trap has doors on each end so they can see through it. A can of tuna for bait and success in inevitable.
There was a comment in this thread about a car exhaust pipe to do in the visitor. Newer vehicles don't put out the same ingredients that make an animal sleepy as older vehicles. My dad and I did this to a few strays on the farm. A couple minutes of idling with his truck and the critter was done. After a much longer time idling with mine, we opened the trap and kitty bolted out of there without even stumbling.
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