|
|
lol that's not cockroaches
|
that is the work of rats.
|
Must be a rat with a masters in professional trolling.
|
I can't even see the bread properly ):
|
On August 08 2011 12:19 Disregard wrote: Must be a rat with a masters in professional trolling. Or a rat thats good at parkour, zingggggg
|
On August 08 2011 12:19 Disregard wrote: Must be a rat with a masters in professional trolling.
I can just see him making his little troll face
God, anyways, not checking for rabies. I haven't gotten bitten afaik. Also note, I didn't even touch the bag.
|
there's a small crack to my room, but it's not really big enough for rats or mice to get through.
Mice can fit through ANYTHING.
|
mice/rats, no doubt in the slightest
|
Canada291 Posts
Cockroaches don't eat that much.. you'd need a swarm of them to eat all of that lol
|
On August 08 2011 12:31 ClysmiC wrote:Show nested quote +there's a small crack to my room, but it's not really big enough for rats or mice to get through. Mice can fit through ANYTHING. Seriously they can. I've seen a mouse acrobatically jump into our dryer's exhaust exit-pipe outside (it has shutters on it like a window blind). I was like "wtf" when I saw it happen- also, the bastard died and stank up the laundry room for a week, but that is another story. The main point of this post is to reinforce what has been quoted.
|
Probably mice... looks like too much damage at once for roaches. My roommate and I had some in our apartment last october. We never saw what they ate, but we sometimes saw one scurry when we walked into a room and turn on a light. Get some mouse traps that look like this:
Shamelessly borrowed from nbjianer.en.alibaba.com it seems because these trip much more easily than the 'classic' mouse trap, small mice won't set those off. Put some peanut butter in the little dish as bait and set them toward a wall (mice run alongside walls). Should work pretty well, that's how we got rid of ours.
gl hf
edit to change pic
|
Ya +1 to the rodent hypothesis. Rat/mice don't have clavicles(collar bones) and can compress themselves through small spaces a lot smaller than you would think.
Also I have a colony of about 1000 roaches right now. Mine are a lot bigger than the Oriental and American roaches you would find around your house and it would take a fair amount of mine to eat that much bread. They wouldn't make the hole that big either, just large enough for them to get in.
(EDIT: spelling)
|
On August 08 2011 13:56 BrogMaN wrote: Ya +1 to the rodent hypothesis. Rat/mice don't have clavicles(collar bones) and can compress themselves through small spaces a lot smaller than you would think.
Also I have a colony of about 1000 roaches right now. Mine are a lot bigger than the Oriental and American roaches you would find around your house and it would take a fair amount of mine to eat that much bread. They wouldn't make the whole that big either, just large enough for them to get in. Really? Your roaches are bigger than rats too?
I know it's mice. I'll seal off the crack.
|
rats do fit your description.,They should be called rats rather that cockroaches.,haha
|
I was gonna say it's probably rats but now too many people are saying that so I changed my mind, it's definitely cockroaches.
Speaking of mice my cat brought a mouse in the house and let it go and now I have a mouse hanging out in my room where I sleep, it will probably wake me up doing it's mice things in the middle of the night. I hope it doesn't eat my magic cards.
|
|
|
|