No.
Are you idiot or what? OF COURSE and even if it wouldn't it'll make the little poor "thing" sick! ;(
6 or 10 a year.
yes all meat eating snakes eat mice
mice...
Perhaps, though most likely not. Peppermint oil repels insects. I've lived 20 years in an old farm house surrounded by hay fields, deer woods, and cattle. I've battled field mice, and pack rats, the entire time I've lived here. I hear about peppermint oil on cotton balls via television and thought it was worth a try. I started with the drawer under my oven, cleaned it really good with hot soapy water and towel dried it. Took four cotton balls and dabbed peppermint oil on each of them and placed them in each corner of the drawer. A few days later I located a pack rat nest in another drawer in the kitchen and I cleaned it and put four peppermint oil dabbed cotton balls, one in each corner and shut the drawer. That was two weeks ago. I checked the drawers today for the first time since placing the peppermint oil dabbed cotton balls in them. No sign of mice at all! It's winter time and mice move in for the winter every winter. Thing winter they may be moving our permanently! The peppermint oil also kills off the horrible smell left behind by the mice. If in fact peppermint oil does repel insects, I pray it works for brown recluse spiders. I'll keep an eye out for those also come spring. I'll loving the stuff and plan to grow my own peppermint and make my own oil. Brig Gen
Very slowly!
They are, in some cases when eating a grasshopper which is part of some mice diet.
By eating mice.
mice or rats.
Yes, most snakes enjoy eating mice and types of insects.
Cats eating mice can pose risks such as contracting diseases or parasites from the mice, potential poisoning from ingesting rodenticides, and the possibility of injury from sharp bones or other indigestible parts of the mouse.
Most carnivores (meat eating animals) will eat pinkies, which are newborn mice.