Ants have been sneaking inside warm houses for centuries. Our ancestors did not use poison, but they had a way to keep ants away from their food. They made ant traps of pottery or glass designed to ...
Ants have been sneaking inside warm houses for centuries. Our ancestors did not use poison, but they had a way to keep the ants away from their food. They made ant traps of pottery or glass designed ...
Now here’s a testament to build quality. If you’ve ever lamented about your electronics dying after just a few years, you’ll be impressed with Colin Pullinger & Sons’ Perpetual Mouse Trap which, 155 ...
The trap is huge. Its trigger plate alone is as big as a dessert plate. When set, the steel-forged jaws would easily be as big around as a man's chest. The spring arms, which drive the jaws shut, are ...
Some of the oldest known mousetraps were catalogued in the late sixteenth century, by Leonard Mascall, the clerk of the kitchen to the Archbishop of Canterbury. Mascall published a series of books on ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results