New Five tales
to send shivers down your spine. Horror fever now on kindle at this link.
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Sewer rat now on kindle fact or fiction read on
SEWER RAT NOW ON KINDLE AT PLUS A NEWS STORY IS THIS FACT OR FICTION
People living in the town
say they have been plagued with the giant creatures (SWNS)
'It's destroyed their habitat. Now the marshland has gone they've had to find somewhere else to live. It's really disrupted local wildlife.'
Cornwall Council no longer provides a free pest control service for domestic premises, although by law it has a duty to ensure occupiers of land keep it free of rats and mice.
'They're not going to go away if you ignore them,' he said. 'The only way realistically is to get a professional company to sort it out.
'There's a lot of legislation with traps, by law they've got to be checked twice a day, and people don't know how to put poison down properly and put it in the wrong places.
Sewer rat fact or fiction read the terrifying story
on kindle now at
5.0
out of 5 stars great rats alive, March
19, 2014
This review
is from: Sewer rat (Kindle Edition)
well
written i enjoyed this book.even the old toxic waste line worked well.if you
like scary mutant creature tales then you will love this.
Fact
A popular seaside resort
is under siege - by a plague of giant rats.
Locals in Newquay, Cornwall, have found themselves battling an infestation of 'massive' rodents, and are worried the super-sized vermin are becoming increasingly bold.
Residents say that a new housing development may have disturbed the vermin who are now prowling the resort and terrorizing people.
Pest control experts are warning that more needs to be done to combat the alarming rise, with figures showing that the number of reported rodents in the town has gone up 50% in the last year.
They add that the rat population has been allowed to swell since the council stopped providing a free extermination service.
One resident said: 'I'm not happy with the situation. I have a daughter who's seven and she's seen dead rats in the garden. She's quite a girlie girl so she doesn't like them at all.
'They are massive - really big for a rat. Some of the cats that live further up the road would think twice about going after one.
'Since there's been this development across the road I've had to get rat traps now. We never used to have them.'
Locals in Newquay, Cornwall, have found themselves battling an infestation of 'massive' rodents, and are worried the super-sized vermin are becoming increasingly bold.
Residents say that a new housing development may have disturbed the vermin who are now prowling the resort and terrorizing people.
Pest control experts are warning that more needs to be done to combat the alarming rise, with figures showing that the number of reported rodents in the town has gone up 50% in the last year.
They add that the rat population has been allowed to swell since the council stopped providing a free extermination service.
One resident said: 'I'm not happy with the situation. I have a daughter who's seven and she's seen dead rats in the garden. She's quite a girlie girl so she doesn't like them at all.
'They are massive - really big for a rat. Some of the cats that live further up the road would think twice about going after one.
'Since there's been this development across the road I've had to get rat traps now. We never used to have them.'
'It's destroyed their habitat. Now the marshland has gone they've had to find somewhere else to live. It's really disrupted local wildlife.'
Cornwall Council no longer provides a free pest control service for domestic premises, although by law it has a duty to ensure occupiers of land keep it free of rats and mice.
Since the service was scrapped, the number of
rats spotted by residents has increased, and complaints have risen from 206 in
2012-2013 to 304 between 2013-2014.
Dave Cornish, of D. Cornish Pest Control, said that despite the rise, business had not picked up because the majority of people were not prepared to pay for professional help.
Dave Cornish, of D. Cornish Pest Control, said that despite the rise, business had not picked up because the majority of people were not prepared to pay for professional help.
'They're not going to go away if you ignore them,' he said. 'The only way realistically is to get a professional company to sort it out.
'There's a lot of legislation with traps, by law they've got to be checked twice a day, and people don't know how to put poison down properly and put it in the wrong places.
'A lot of people chuck it down and you find dead
birds. It can be harmful to pets too.'
Mr Cornish said the best way to prevent a rat infestation is to keep lids on rubbish bins, and to sweep up excess bird food every night.
'If people don't address the problem in another two or three years we're going to be overrun with rats,' he said.
Mr Cornish said the best way to prevent a rat infestation is to keep lids on rubbish bins, and to sweep up excess bird food every night.
'If people don't address the problem in another two or three years we're going to be overrun with rats,' he said.
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