MOLE TRAP REVIEW

Surely a mole trap is a mole trap so why have a review?

The brand new scissor trap on the right, bought on Ebay, is virtually useless, except for holding paper together on a windy day!  See why below.

The same applies to one brand of Tunnel trap.  

So read on...........


TYPES OF TRAP REVIEWED

Faulty cheap import on left

MAIN TYPES

The two main types of mole trap available on the British Market are the Scissor Trap and the Tunnel Trap (also known as the half tunnel or Duffus Trap, after it's inventor).  This page reviews these two , including, in the case of the Duffus trap, which ones to buy and which ones to avoid. It also reviews the Talpex Trap. An excellent trap but seldom seen. There are also some comments on Live Catch traps and Sonic Mole Repellers.  There are other traps about.  A number of  variations on the scissor trap, and various other designs.  My advice is not to bother with them, except for the Talpex Trap


The Scissor Trap is the trap most  commonly seen in garden shops, hardware stores etc. and therefore the one most commonly used by those just wanting the odd trap or two for a problem in their garden/paddock. The Tunnel Trap is the choice of most professional mole catchers.


 I am firmly of the opinion that there simply nothing to touch the Duffus or Tunnel Trap.  Forgive me therefore if I dismiss other types  as inferior with the exception of the Talpex.  All I will say is that I used the scissor trap for many years until someone showed me how to fine tune a tunnel trap.  After that there was simply no contest and I have now disposed of my scissor traps and with one exception exclusively use tunnel traps. That one exception is the Talpex Trap. I have a specific use for it, but details of that further down.


There are thousands of scissor traps in use and it is the one most commonly found in garden shops etc so I will look at that first.


TRAP REVIEW Scissor Trap


It has main three main advantages:

  1. It is very easy to set the trap. (By that I mean squeezing the handles and placing the trigger tongue in position)

  2. You can see from a distance if it has sprung 

  3. Quite easy to tune the trap to make it ultra sensitive

  4. It is a very simple but sturdy design. 


That, I am afraid, is it.  The rest is downhill.

The disadvantages are:

  1. Although easy to set, it is tricky to install in a mole run, particularly in deep ones. It has to be covered in such a way that nothing, e.g. stones or bits of turf fouls the moving parts.  Because of the sticking up handles, it is difficult to totally cover so as to wholly exclude the light from the mole run without impeding the action of the trap

  2. A stone in the wrong place will jam the jaws, a frequent occurrence in stony soils.

  3. If there is a frost, the soil round the handles freezes and prevents the trap from working

  4. Heavy rain will wash the soil from over the trap into the run thus exposing it

  5. Not easy to install in a very shallow run, and likewise a very deep run

  6. In my view not a particularly humane trap, as the spring is not very powerful, with one exception, the Extra Power trap imported by www.pest-stop.co.uk  

  7. Cannot be used with livestock present, owing to the sticking up handles.

  8. Hitting the trap with a mower will probably destroy the trap and damage the blade of the mower. 

  9. There are quite a number of badly designed copies on the market

  10. All these factors contribute to a much higher level of misses, i.e. a mole that has passed through the trap and either triggered it without getting caught, or dug under it, or even worse been partially trapped and then escaped.  You then more often than not have a trap shy mole. I used to think I was doing well if 50% of traps where a mole had passed had a dead one in it.  With the Tunnel trap that figure is over 90%


Why then is this the most common trap available?  I think because of it's simplicity in setting and the sturdy design.  The only real alternative, the tunnel trap, is quite tricky to set until you get used to it. There are many different brands on the market.  Few if any have makers names on them.  Some of the foreign imports are poorly made.  As I am not a user of this type of trap I am unable to comment on the different brands although further down you will find the bad points to look out for in a scissor trap..


TRAP REVIEW Tunnel, or Duffus Trap


To me, logic dictates that this is the perfect design of trap. It has a powerful action, incorporates a half tunnel, so is dead easy to cover, and the working parts are not prone to being jammed by stones turf etc. Be warned though that one of the most popular brands on the market, usually sold in a box under the brand name BIG CHEESE,  has a design fault and although it will catch moles, the catching percentage is lower than other brands.  Further details below.


Advantages of the Tunnel Trap are

  1. Easy to install in a mole run as the half tunnel means you can  just brush a bit of loose soil over the top and all light is excluded from the run.

  2. Fast powerful killing action, unlike some of its competitors

  3. Easy to "tune" the trap so that it is very sensitive to being triggered.

  4. Working parts virtually never jammed by stones or turf

  5. If covered by a piece of turf or a small board, will not be affected by frost, or heavy rain

  6. Can be set in a paddock/field containing  livestock  if covered by a small board.

  7. Will not damage a mower as no part of the trap is above ground (except in v shallow runs).

  8. If trapping on a lawn, much neater than a scissor trap. Cut out a piece of turf above the run with a border spade which is the same width as the trap. Turf can then be replaced when mole has been dealt with, molehills removed and lawn will be undamaged. 

  9. Can be used equally successfully in  deep or surface runs

  10. Can, and occasionally does, catch two moles at a time

  11. Easy to conceal when set in places where the public have access, therefore less likely to get stolen.


Disadvantages of the Tunnel Trap

  1. Tricky to set unless you are shown the technique. Get the setting wrong and you can get a painful rap on the fingers!

  2. As sold very often not suitable for installation in a run.  The trap needs to be "tuned" so that it triggers quite easily. Simple to do once you have been shown or seen how to do it on my CD ROM

  3. Cannot see from a distance if they have been sprung

  4. As nothing shows above ground, easy to lose trap if child/dog/etc removes marker stick.