JT Eaton 709-AP Bait Block Anticoagulant Rodenticide, Apple Flavor, for Mice and Rats (9 lb Pail of 144)








Key features
- •Anticoagulant block bait with specially formulated apple flavor that attracts and eliminates mice and rats
- •Active ingredient Diphacinone (0.005-percent) efficiently eliminates smaller rodents
- •144-packs of 1-ounce rodenticide in a tamper evident resealable pail
- •Pail measures 10-1/2-inches length by 10-1/2-inches width by 10-1/4-inches height
- •Comes with a 1-year limited warranty
JT Eaton 709-AP Bait Block Anticoagulant Rodenticide, Apple Flavor, for Mice and Rats (9 lb Pail of 144)
List Price: $65.94$59.35DEALYou Save: $6.59 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 25, 2026In Stock (12)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.4
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
80%
4★
20%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
!
JJ Belaken✓ Verified Purchase•July 17, 2023
Definitely seeing a difference!!
Works great on voles!
CJFreeman✓ Verified Purchase•June 23, 2023
Used in the plastic pvc pipe trap and no more vole problems
Rodents love it.
Steve R✓ Verified Purchase•June 20, 2023
I've only used this product for 3 days. So far, In each place I put the traps (near where I know the colonies are located) Rats have been eating this apple flavored poison by the block. 14 completely gone so far in 2 nights. Many more munched on by smaller mice.
Unless the rodents in this area are already resistant to the poison, I know I will start to see and smell results in a couple days.
I do not know what poison has been used at this point by others in the neighborhood. I do know the neighbors were using peanut butter in traps so I decided to avoid that flavoring since they associate the smell with traps. I believe many of the negative reviews claiming that the rodents don't touch it, is most likely due to environmental reasons...not waiting long enough, maybe neighbors tried the same stuff, or they have become resistant to the chemicals as neighbors have tried it in the past, maybe even handled incorrectly. Among others....
Unfortunately, the rat colony is coming from the sewer from a neighbor's house and there is little I can do except get all of them I can from my area. So far, this stuff has attracted them as though it were candy to a kid... Which leads me to believe I will have many less running out of the sewers.
There are no mount holes. This is designed to sit stand alone in a trap.
P.S. Don't use rubber gloves to touch this stuff. They WILL smell the rubber on the food. My recommendation is to 1. Leave the trap outside to weather for awhile and remove/reduce the human odors. 2. Use 2 sticks like chop sticks (don't touch the stick ends before it touches the bait) to place inside the trap.
Unless the rodents in this area are already resistant to the poison, I know I will start to see and smell results in a couple days.
I do not know what poison has been used at this point by others in the neighborhood. I do know the neighbors were using peanut butter in traps so I decided to avoid that flavoring since they associate the smell with traps. I believe many of the negative reviews claiming that the rodents don't touch it, is most likely due to environmental reasons...not waiting long enough, maybe neighbors tried the same stuff, or they have become resistant to the chemicals as neighbors have tried it in the past, maybe even handled incorrectly. Among others....
Unfortunately, the rat colony is coming from the sewer from a neighbor's house and there is little I can do except get all of them I can from my area. So far, this stuff has attracted them as though it were candy to a kid... Which leads me to believe I will have many less running out of the sewers.
There are no mount holes. This is designed to sit stand alone in a trap.
P.S. Don't use rubber gloves to touch this stuff. They WILL smell the rubber on the food. My recommendation is to 1. Leave the trap outside to weather for awhile and remove/reduce the human odors. 2. Use 2 sticks like chop sticks (don't touch the stick ends before it touches the bait) to place inside the trap.
Only kind that the mice ever seem to actually eat
eian t weissman✓ Verified Purchase•June 18, 2023
I've tried multiple flavors and brands of bait block poison and this one actually works. Never seems to quite eradicate them entirely, though to be fair i think the old foundation of my house is pretty porous and easy for the little jerks to crawl through. but it has worked as very effective population control.
Works great.
Jim Chang✓ Verified Purchase•June 15, 2023
This red version works much better than the green bait. Given the choice, mice will not touch the green bait if the red is also present.
Page 1 of 2







