It does look like rodent droppings, though usually rodent droppings are more even, rounded and formed, some are not. I don't know what these are from though.
Inspect other places such as pipe accesses underneath sinks, radiators, gas line penetrations for stove/furnace, attic if accessible, top of basement foundation wall if applicable. The reason being that pipes/wires provide avenues for rodents to move around. If there is an attic above this bathroom, I would be up there with a good light looking for more. Keep us posted.
Has anyone had rodents eaten your PEX Pipes?
I have had my PEX Pipes for about 3 years and yet has experienced this problem although I hear roof rats in my attic once in a while. My PEX pipes do not run in the attic since I have a two story home.Read More
My area has a wild pig problem, and the advice is to kill lawn grubs to keep the pigs from destroying the lawn.
Fine. I bought Scotts GrubEx and will apply it this week. However, its instructions say "apply 2.87 lbs of product per 1,000 sq. ft."
Really? 2.87 lbs down to a hundredth of a pound? And now I have to determine the area of my non-rectangular lawn to a similar level of precision?
What do folks actually do with these kind of instructions? Do people actually weigh out 2.87 lbs into a spreader (proportional to the actual measured square footage)? Or is there an easier way to eyeball the right amount?
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