Nadya Crossman-Serb from Winnipeg, Canada, is laughing now but she wasn't laughing last weekend when she noticed something very strange on the rear-view mirror of her car.
"I was at a red light, and I looked up, and there was a mouse on the rear-view mirror," Crossman-Serb said.
She admits she had a bit of a "freak-out," when she noticed her unexpected guest perched on the mirror.
She said she thought about swatting it down, but didn't know if that would make things worse.
"So I just left it and we drove home together," said
Crossman-Serb.
The mouse stayed on the mirror the whole way home, but when the family
gathered around the car to see the hitchhiker, it retreated back into
hiding. That's when her dad sprang into action.
"He laid a sticky-pad on the [floor] of our car, and it got stuck. I
don't know what he did with it after."
Shaun Jeffrey is a branch manager with Abell Pest Control and the
president of the Manitoba chapter of the Canadian Pest Management
Association.
It's rare for mice to seek shelter in cars that are used on a daily
basis, he said, because mice are very wary of new objects in their
environment. But if the car is stationary for a long period of time they
get "curious" and might try to make a nest, Jeffrey said.
A vehicle is only as secure from rodents as the structure it's in, he
said, and "paying someone $85 to protect your garage may save your
$85,000 vehicle."
It's not hard for a family of tiny mice to cause big damage to a vehicle
over the winter, Jeffrey said, and Winnipeggers should be especially
concerned this year if the volume of calls at Abell Pest Control is
anything to go by.
As for Crossman-Serb's mouse, she figures it may have been in the car
for weeks, possibly hiding in the sunglasses holder by the mirror.
There's a news video here.
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