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    The Week

    Irony alert: Disneyland's no-mouse policy

    Hundreds of feral cats take over the amusement park each night, patrolling the grounds for mice and serving as de facto exterminators

    The story: Is the House of Mouse is actually home to hundreds of feral cats? Unveiling 8 secrets about Disneyland, Adam K. Raymond at Mental Floss says that each night, a colony of cats takes over the park (and has since 1955). Park officials, who love them because they help control the mouse population, have set up permanent feeding stations, but still take measures to contain the cats' numbers, spaying and neutering the felines, and putting any kittens they find up for adoption. "After all," says Raymond. "A park full of cartoon mice is more enticing than a park full of real ones."

    The reaction: This is certainly a "creepy revelation," says The Australian. No one wants to imagine the Happiest Place on Earth "overrun" with hundreds of cats — or actual mice for that matter. For cat lovers, however, says Tina Ferraro at YA Fresh, this just provides more incentive to visit the park. "Next time I go to Disneyland, I'm keeping my eyes open for cats." And it's a brilliant way to handle both the cat and mouse problem. It's "a smart, humane solution," says Chip and Company. "As an animal lover, this warms my heart."

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    4 comments

    • bens  •  10 mths ago
      A cat is more humane than a mousetrap? If the cat is not hungry it will use the mouse as a toy until it eventually bites its head off....yet another example of animal lovers(liberals) not knowing what they are talking about.
      • mblue 10 mths ago
        Never yet seen one of mine "bite its head off" -- too much bone there. Maybe if you knew what you were talking about you'd be more convincing. Mouse traps ARE cruel, as anyone coming across a mouse caught in one will tell you. The mouse is often not killed, just maimed and stuck there. On the other hand, prey caught by a natural predator secrete a chemical that helps numb them to their impending death (in lay-speak). This is the natural order of things, but can't happen when humans change things around with traps. What a shame that some people prefer their own, inhumane solutions. BTW- when my mouser cats aren't hungry, they don't prowl for prey, much less toy with it. If one runs right under their noses
        they'll give a half-hearted swat at it at most.
    • Daniel  •  10 mths ago
      I could have told you they do that. The last time I ever went to Disneyland I stopped in one of the men's rooms and saw a mouse run right between my legs as I stood at the stall.
      • Krabat 10 mths ago
        was that a gay mouse?
      • Bill Blake 10 mths ago
        How did you know that mouse was on the menu? BTW, please stand close, and facing, a urinial or toilet (and lift the seat), rather than just letting fly at the stall.

        Keeps the "cast members" happiest. Thanks!
      • Bill Blake 10 mths ago
        sorry, "urinal"
    • Saltines for Obama  •  10 mths ago
      Cool! Disneyland has become so sterile over the years, nice to see signs of real life.
    • Eric1  •  10 mths ago
      And you can tell the cat solution has been working, because you keep finding small pairs of empty, blood-stained 'mouse-pants' lying around the popcorn stands...