A veritable gated estate, constructed of the finest materials, accessible to only the finest, best bred, most high-income rat.

No wonder there was so little damage as rats nested in the wood. They didn’t need to.

They could just undermine the floor and nest under the slabs.
I’m gonna need a new plan here…
















































C-4? Is Torso Boy a ratter?
I think you need to locate yourself a couple of gopher snakes and make them your friend. Not sure what kind of cold wrather burrow they need but if you could master that, rodents would be a thing of the past.
Well, it appears that no harm came to your firewood. Wasn’t that the point of your precautions?
Can you cement the floor under your woodpile? But then again I have seen rats and voles dig under the cement. Maybe deep enough where they can’t do that. I don’t know how big your wood shed is. It would be an expense I know that.
It actually was, which causes me to wonder how much I should really care. But it’s very annoying.
Given how much damage rats, mice and other rodents do around and to your property and your food, and given how many diseases they and their little parasites carry and deposit in their poop, if it were my woodpile it would be home to cyanide pellets which will off the rodents instantly right in their nests. You can shove the pellets back where their nests are. The carcasses have to be removed, preferably wearing gloves and a mask, and carefully disposed of, a minor inconvenience compared with a hospital stay or re-wiring the Jeep just when you desperately need to go to town. I wonder, it may be that caring is in your long term best interests. Just saying. You’ll need another method for your juniper piles of course.
Hmmm….What if you combined the best of the suggestions and revamped firewood storage to provide maximum protection against rodent molestation and deliberately created a “rodent haven” in such a way, and location, as to simplify and ease the task of eliminating them? No clue what your packrat community would find sufficiently attractive to pleasantly and reliably, lure them to their doom, and the project would be, probably, very long term, but there’s either coexistence or combat.
I’m with the concrete floor concept. The shed isn’t all that big, and the slab wouldn’t have to be all that thick, particularly if properly reinforced. Don’t forget to pitch it to get runoff of the rain that will somehow get in there.
Then good side/rear closing and a good-fitting door . . .
It’s too bad that cats don’t fare well in your neighborhood.