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One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 10:08 pm
by MacTheWolf (imported)
Friday morning I told mom I was going to the Humane Society to get a rabies shot for my white german sheppard. The trip took longer than I thought and mom, of course, panicked. She frantically called 911 saying, "my son is missing, my dog is missing, and I'm all alone and scared." When I arrived home, the police were awaiting me. They chewed me out because my house was cluttered, messy and overrun by mice. Office on aging showed up ten minutes later followed by Adult Protective Services.

I was given a choice: allow them to take mom to a hospital for 10 days to two weeks or go to jail for charges of "elder abuse." I accepted the former and they took mom away. Cops and A.P.S. said mom could return when house is both uncluttered and mouse free.

Uncluttering and general house cleaning is the easy part. I plan to spend one day cleaning each room. Mice wise, I'll need to have the house tented and fumigated. During fumigation, dogs can stay in back yard but cat and I need to find a cheap motel for 24 hours.

Today I cleaned her room and discovered all her blood pressure meds, nerve meds and sleeping pills were missing. I panicked. When I visited mom at psych ward tonight, head nurse reassured me they had all of mom's meds. Would have been nice if they had told me as they were taking mom's meds from the house.

Anyone know how much they'll charge to tent a house?

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Sun Jun 18, 2006 11:03 pm
by sag111 (imported)
WOW i am sorry to here that and no i am not sure how much that will cost but i bet it isent cheep.All i can say is i am so sorry you have to go through this

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 3:34 am
by SplitDik (imported)
That is both a sad and somehow funny account Wolfie.

I'm sure you were not abusing an elder, but perhaps your ability to keep up the housework and to properly monitor her (obviously) paranoic tendencies, does warrant considering getting her some trained caretaker.

However, I assume you are not overly wealthy, so unfortunately I'm not sure what options you have that would actually be better for her. The most important thing is getting some sort of daily care worker.

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 5:57 am
by Riverwind (imported)
Mackie,

First, fire the cat as he is not doing his job. :kittygray

Next, spend 30 bucks and get mouse traps and fly paper. 👹

Bate traps with peanut butter.

In a week or so you will have gotten rid of most of those little bastards. 🧱

So, clean house, set traps, wait for APS to return and show them the dead mices and your traps laid out in the house. :redbounce

Ask how your mother is doing, :D or 😭.

Ask them if there is anything else you can do, be nice. http://www.eunuch.org/Public/Images/ea1/E8.gif and remember to say 🙏

Go get some beer, order out a pizza, and party. 🤘🎶🤘

Any time my friend, 👉 always glad to help.🙋🙏

River

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 7:26 am
by Slammr (imported)
Years ago, when I was first married, we lived in a small two bedroom house. That we had mice soon became obvious. While we were eating, one kept poking his head out from under the refrigerator. I had a pellet gun pistol and blew his head off from my seat at the dining room table. Of course, I couldn't hope to wipe out all the mice that way, so I bought two traps, setting them under the sink in the kitchen before going to bed.

I'd just settled down to sleep when I heard, "snap, snap."

Two mice were in the two traps. I emptied them out, reset them, and went back to bed.

"Snap, snap."

Two more mice, reset the traps, back to bed. "Snap, snap."

Sixteen mice later, I finally got to sleep. I bought poison the next day. It worked better than the traps, and I didn't have to dispose of the dead mice. Since then, I've found that poison seems to be more effective than traps -- if you don't mind having your walls full of dead mice, that is. 😄

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 10:51 am
by MacTheWolf (imported)
In the recent past I have purchased both snap and glue traps. They work fine if you have around a dozen of the lil varmits. In my case, I believe there is the annual mouse convention meeting here.

Besides, I was told (ordered) by the city, to get the house fumigated, hence tented or else. The else being mom would not return. And since she wouldn't last two months in a rest home, tenting seems to be my only remaining option. Tuesday I find out the COST:P

I'll update as soon as I discover how many of my arms and legs they want.

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 10:55 am
by A-1 (imported)
Slammr (imported) wrote: Mon Jun 19, 2006 7:26 am Years ago, when I was first married, we lived in a small two bedroom house. That we had mice soon became obvious. While we were eating, one kept poking his head out from under the refrigerator. I had a pellet gun pistol and blew his head off from my seat at the dining room table. Of course, I couldn't hope to wipe out all the mice that way, so I bought two traps, setting them under the sink in the kitchen before going to bed.

I'd just settled down to sleep when I heard, "snap, snap."

Two mice were in the two traps. I emptied them out, reset them, and went back to bed.

"Snap, snap."

Two more mice, reset the traps, back to bed. "Snap, snap."

Sixteen mice later, I finally got to sleep. I bought poison the next day. It worked better than the traps, and I didn't have to dispose of the dead mice. Since then, I've found that poison seems to be more effective than traps -- if you don't mind having your walls full of dead mice, that is. 😄

Mackie,

BE careful. Poisoned mice that crawl into a ventilator and die stink pretty bad for several weeks.

Not to be too nosy, but you may need the services of a good attorney before all of this is over. If you mother is that confused, she may have Alzheimer's Disease and if so she should not be left alone.

Keep in mind that if she has a deteriorating mental disease that she is going to get a lot worse, and that at some point, it will be impossible to care for her by yourself. You may have already reached that point.

You may not get to bring her back home, according to what the hospital stay yields in information about her condition. If you have siblings be ready for them to be involved.

You are right, these matters are very, very messy.

Good luck and keep us informed about how you are doing through all of this. I know that it is hard for you.

🚬 A-1 🚬

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 10:59 am
by Uncle Flo (imported)
Sorry to hear you have so many troubles all at once. I'm afraid I can't offer advice about tenting a house - I don't think that they do that in this part of the country. --FLO--

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Mon Jun 19, 2006 11:36 am
by Blaise (imported)
Complicated. I am sorry you are enduring this trouble. You are in my prayers.

Re: One Day in the Life of a Wolf - Memorial 7-25-20

Posted: Wed Jun 21, 2006 7:04 pm
by MacTheWolf (imported)
My next steps are as follows:

1. Wait for mom's doctor to call and tell me if she can sign a contract.

2. Have mom sign Power of Attorney for me with notary as witness.

3. Obtain loan of $5,000 - 10,000

If all the above goes through without snags, here is loan money spending.

• Cutting off TV antennae (never used it anyways)

• Tenting the house for vermin, a three day job. $1,400 +

• Board/Care pets $144

• Motel for me thre days

• New bedroom window (rat entrace point)

• New outside back door (mouse entrance point)

• Trim for inside back door

• Trim Palm Tree (city ordered it done)

• Buy lawnmower

• Buy vacumn cleaner

• Brake Job on mom's car

• Back utility bills

Fun huh :)