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Tomcat Bromethalin Place Pacs Bait, Pest Control for Agricultural Buildings and Homes, Kill Rats and Mice

  • Based on 27,626 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Monday, Nov 25
Order within 20 hours and 40 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Size: 1-Pack


Style: Bait Packs


Features

  • Rodents cease feeding after consuming a toxic dose
  • Palatable formulation for mice and rats
  • Can be used indoors and outdoors
  • Ready to use

Description

Tomcat with bromethalin kills rodents effectively, even anticoagulant resistant Norway rats, roof rats, & house mice. Individual bait pacs can be used in & around agricultural buildings for rodent control. The bait pacs are reliable & easy to use.

Item Form: Other


Item Weight: 4.85 Pounds


Brand: Tomcat


Target Species: Mouse


UPC:


UPC: 048745220222


Global Trade Identification Number: 22


Brand Name: Tomcat


Item Weight: 4.85 Pounds


Target Species: Mouse


Item Form: Other


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Monday, Nov 25

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View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • It works for me!
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
Easy to use and very effective in my case. I had a Rat problem under my house and in the attic. After applying several I notice that they were being chewed. Within a couple of days I no longer see or hear any Rats. I still have plenty left and will reapply as needed. Solved my problem!
Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2024 by Stephen K. Moss

  • Very effective
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
It only takes a few of these blocks to wipe out rodents. I have used this brand of poisons before and it works quickly for me. It gets rid of mice and rats in just a few applications. I needed this bucket for rats in my greenhouse. I have large cages of medium and small birds in there like a large bird house and the rats and mice come for the seed droppings. This is a constant battle, so I will get more of this as needed. You just place the blocks where the rodents frequent and when the blocks stop disappearing, the rodents are all gone. I highly recommend this brand and this product. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2024 by SJoseph

  • Great product
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
Great product. Mice love to eat and good price. Keeps the population down.
Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2024 by barb cordoza

  • Won't work on squirrels
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
Great for rats and mice but not quirrels
Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2024 by Mike Brown

  • Works well
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
Convenient bucket packaging. Works just like the smaller packs - sans the bait box - at a better price point.
Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2024 by John D

  • THIS IS YOUR SOLUTION!
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
Oh man, I have been waiting to write this bad boy for a minute. So, my wife and I moved into our new home with limited signs of mice evidence. I did notice some droppings around our water heater, but assumed they were old and well taken care of. Fast forward a year and we were being ATTACKED! It went from no mice activity to holes in our dog food bags, crawling in the walls, and eventually them running around in the house. The house was the last straw...I began battle. Naturally I went for the cheapest options first. We did wooden mouse traps with peanut butter. They would get set off and the peanut butter would be gone, but no mouse. Next, giant wooden rat traps. Same story. Then, sticky pads and traps combined. Got two kills with the sticky pad, but the mice still seemed to begetting off of them somehow. I WAS LOSING MY MIND! The freaks were still running around the house and pooping everywhere. My whole garage smelled terrible and it was seeping into the house. I would even flip the light on real quick and peak my head into the garage only to see them sitting on my golf bag staring at me. They didn't even care. I took that personally and decided there were no longer any rules. I bought 24 JAWS mouse traps from amazon. These were not as productive as I would have liked, but I was getting kills. Then it happened, 1 RAT (bc this motherlover was huge) got caught in three traps at the same and was still flailing around in my garage. I grabbed my shovel and took its head. The line had been crossed. I was committed. POISON, it had to be done. I read reviews for hours and everyone seemed to have the same issues I did. So I got the bait and spread it in 3 of the main locations I saw activity. They ate it fast, like within the hour. Every time one disappeared, I replaced. Eventually the bait stopped disappearing. Then came the smells. Mice dying in my vents and walls. From what i've read, that will go away. BUT THEN! And you aren't gonna believe this nonsense... My wife and I are watching TV downstairs and something caught her eye. There was a flipping rat sitting within a couple feet of us staring at our Xmas tree. She flipped, I flipped, our son laughed. It didn't move. I walked up to it. Nothing, it stood cold. The poison must have it messed up in the head, right? I decided to sweep it into a box; didn't have to. I put the box down and walked right in. After staring at it for twenty minutes I realized what had to be done. I took it outside and removed it's head with my shovel. The dded was done. Now we wait.... Listen, this stuff will solve your problem. But when the time comes, you will have to "take matters into your own hands". God's Speed. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2019 by colby

  • It works if you can ever get anything to eat it, but it's a cruel way to die
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
We live in the woods and living with nature is just part of the deal. Things had been fine forever, but something changed in the last few years and rodents seemed to overpopulate and take over and become very aggressive. Mice, chipmunks, and squirrels started breaking into the attic and crawlspace causing thousands of dollars of damage to the insulation and to the heating and air conditioning ducts. Mice in the house were eating food and clothing and destroying lots of other stuff. Voles were eating plants in the garden and mice in the garage were eating and destroying things. Chipmunks had caused broken sidewalks and driveways with their tunnels undermining them and they had even tunneled under the foundation footing to come inside the crawlspace and chewed into many of the HVAC ducts. There were nuts and acorns in the ducts and all over the crawlspace. I really don't want to kill things so I tried all of the humane ways I could find to exclude and repel them but nothing worked. Finally when I discovered a rodent nest inside one of the heating ducts and realized that we were obviously breathing their hair and feces as it blew the air into the house, I decided enough was enough and it was time to take serious action. I stuck with mouse traps in the house because we didn't want poisoned ones dying in the walls or house. Outside and in the garage I tried this product. First I tried using rat traps to catch the squirrels, but didn’t catch a single one in a few weeks, so then I figured maybe I had to go with poison even though I thought it must be a terrible way to die. I researched the different poisons and thought that the common anti-coagulants seemed the worst—dying from internal bleeding. Finally I settled on Bromethalin thinking it might be the “least bad” of them all. And that’s how I ended up choosing these Tomcat Bait Chunx. First, yes I know this product is not labeled for squirrels and chipmunks but they are rodents and I know it will kill them too. Day 1 I put a few full chunks on the trees and within a few hours 3 were gone so I figured we were in business. I continued to put out chunks and parts of chunks but fewer and fewer were being taken and I continued to have lots of squirrel problems. It was early spring so I thought maybe they were storing them in their nests and not actually eating them. I put some chunks near the vole holes and they all disappeared and after a couple of weeks it seemed all of the voles were gone. Success. In the garage, I never saw so much as a nibble on any of the tomcat chunks so obviously the mice don't like them. Fail. I went back to mousetraps baited with peanut butter and continued to catch mice and one shrew. After about a week I started seeing fewer squirrels so the poison seemed to be working. Hopefully success… Then one day I went outside and a tiny baby squirrel ran straight up to me and started climbing up my leg. In all of years of living out here I'd never seen a squirrel approach a human, much less run up his leg! It was obviously scared and alone. I knew that the poison must have killed its parents because you never see a squirrel that small. It must have come out of its nest because it was starving. You could see the look of fear in its eyes and a "help me" kind of attitude. So here I was on one hand trying to kill them but on the other hand here's a scared baby begging for help. It kept climbing up my pant leg and sat in my (gloved) hand and tried to keep climbing up to my head. I sat it down and got it some nuts and water and it gobbled them up for a good 30 minutes and then tried to run up a tree but it wasn't strong enough so it ran off into the woods. The next day I found its back legs and tail. Something had eaten the rest of it. I thought to myself...this is the circle of life...someone dies and someone is fed. It's nature. But by then the squirrels stopped eating the tomcat chunks. Who knows if they lost their taste for them or if they figured out they were poison. So I started cutting up the chunks and mixing them with peanut butter and squirrels started eating them again. Over the next few days I saw a few more baby squirrels in the same orphaned situation so I gave them food and water also. Then one day I watched a baby squirrel try to run and then it fell over. It would run a few feet and fall over. Run a few feet and fall over. I knew that the active ingredient Bromethalin works on the nervous system, eventually causing paralysis and then death and here I was seeing it in action. I felt bad to watch this baby squirrel suffer and so I decided I had to find a more humane way that would lead to as instant a death as possible. I looked into ones that shock them, smash them in the head, and every other method I could find. Finally I settled on the old-fashioned conibear 110 traps baited with peanut butter and have mainly stuck with that method ever since. It’s mostly an instant kill but sadly, not always. I still use these Tomcat chunx mixed with peanut butter for the squirrels and chipmunks that continue to be a problem and simply won’t get trapped. Total kill has been 24 squirrels by conibear trap and an estimated 5-7 by Tomcat chunx, so you can see that the traps are much more effective and also more humane. I also caught 2 chipmunks with the conibears and probably a few more with the peanut butter poison. Again, I feel bad for having to go to this extreme to protect us and our home, but it seems like it has to be done because they just keep coming and trying to break in. As I was anguishing over killing things, a buddy of mine told me “Look, we’ve killed all the predators so things are out of balance and there’s nothing to kill the rodents. YOU have to be the predator.” And so, with that frame of mind I was able to do it and protect the health and safety of our family. Still I’m not happy about it. I take it seriously that I’m taking a life and anybody who uses this stuff should too. From what I’ve seen, poisoning is a cruel way to die and so I use it only as a last resort. I think the traps are a much more effective and humane way to go. As an aside, if I ever do have to buy rodent poison again I probably wouldn’t buy this product since the mice, chipmunks, and squirrels don’t seem to like it. There’s a peanut butter flavored bait by another company that I’d probably try next time. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2020 by Widely Read

  • Excellent bait!
Size: 1-Pack Style: Bait Chunx
This is my go to rodent bait as it’s easy to use and very effective. I put it along fences and under shrubs where I’ve seen rodent activity. Definitely works as I frequently see signs of feeding on the blocks.
Reviewed in the United States on September 7, 2024 by Jason

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