
The Most Dangerous Thing About Winter Isn't the Cold. It's What Happens When Mice Come Inside.
Most people have no idea THIS is happening until it's too late.
Right now, as temperatures drop, millions of mice are doing something that puts your family in serious danger.
They're not just looking for warmth.
They're entering reproductive overdrive.
And if you don't understand what's happening in the walls of your home right now, you could be facing a nightmare by January.
I learned this the hard way.
"I Thought We Just Had ONE Mouse. By December, I Counted 47 Droppings in a Single Day."
I'll never forget the morning I found mouse droppings on my daughter's pillow.
Not near her bed.
ON her pillow.
Where her face had been just hours before.
I felt like I was going to be sick, I was ready to grab a flamethrower to torch EVERY possible disease-carrying mouse I could find.
This was October. We'd seen one mouse dart across the kitchen two weeks earlier.
My husband set a trap.
We caught it.
Problem solved, right?
Wrong.
By Thanksgiving, I was finding droppings every single morning. In the pantry. Behind the toaster. Under the couch cushions.
By Christmas, I stopped counting.
The scratching in the walls became so loud my daughter couldn't sleep.
"Mommy, I haven't seen a single mouse!" she said one morning.
I thought she was giving me good news.
But then I realized: we weren't seeing them because they were living INSIDE our walls now.
What Pest Control Companies Don't Tell You About "Winter Mouse Season"
I finally broke down and called an exterminator in late November.
Gary Anderson showed up with 20+ years of experience and a grim look on his face.
"How long have you known you had mice?" he asked.
"About six weeks," I said. "We caught one in October—"
He actually winced.
"Ma'am, I need you to understand something. That one mouse you caught in October? She was pregnant. And every female mouse she had contact with before you caught her? They're probably pregnant too."
I felt my stomach drop.
"What are you saying?"
He pulled out his phone and showed me a chart.
"Here's what happens from September through February that most homeowners don't know about:
September-October: Mice start seeking shelter as temperatures drop below 50°F. A single pregnant female can enter your home.
October-November: That female gives birth to 6-8 babies. Those babies reach sexual maturity in just 6 weeks.
November-December: Those babies start breeding. Each litter produces 6-8 MORE mice.
December-January: You now have three generations breeding simultaneously in your walls.
January-February: A single mouse that entered in September can create a colony of 50-60 mice by February."¹
I stared at him in horror.
"Are you telling me that one mouse I saw in October has turned into…"
"Dozens," he said flatly.
"Maybe more. And they're all living in your insulation right now, staying warm and breeding non-stop."
The Kansas State University Study That Changed Everything I Thought I Knew About Mice
Gary pulled up a research study on his tablet.
"Most people think mice come inside just to escape the cold.
That's partially true. But here's what the research shows…"
He showed me a study from Kansas State University that tracked mouse behavior during winter months.²
The findings were terrifying:
- Mice don't just survive better indoors during winter – they reproduce 400% faster than they do in outdoor environments
- Winter mice have 6-8 babies per litter compared to 3-4 in outdoor colonies
- Indoor winter temperatures (65-72°F) create optimal breeding conditions that trigger accelerated reproduction
- Female mice can become pregnant again within 24 hours of giving birth during winter months
- A single female mouse can produce up to 10 litters per year when living indoors during winter³
"Your home isn't just shelter for them," Gary explained. "It's a five-star maternity ward with unlimited food, perfect temperature, and zero predators."
"So when I caught that one mouse in October…"
"You probably already had a dozen more in your walls. And now you have several dozen. All reproducing. Right now."
The Truth About Winter Mice That Will Make Your Blood Run Cold
I looked at Gary, confused.
"But we set more traps. Lots of them. Why aren't we catching anything?"
He actually laughed.
But not in a mean way.
More like he'd heard this a thousand times.
"That's the worst part about winter mice. They're smarter than summer mice."
"What?"
He explained:
"Mice that successfully make it inside during fall are the survivors. They're more cautious. More intelligent. And once they're established in your walls with plenty of food and warmth, they have zero reason to risk approaching a trap."⁴
He walked me through why everything I'd tried had failed:
Snap Traps:
"Winter mice won't take the bait. They have your pantry, your pet food, crumbs under your appliances. Why would they risk a trap?"
Poison Bait Stations:
"Even if they eat it, they die in your walls. Then you have decomposing bodies you can't reach. Plus, it's incredibly dangerous with kids and pets."
Ultrasonic Devices:
"Mice adapt to the frequency in about 72 hours. Complete waste of money."
Sealing Entry Points:
"Good luck finding every single gap they used. And even if you could, you've just trapped dozens of breeding mice INSIDE your home."
"So what am I supposed to do? Just... live with them?"
His expression softened.
"No. But you need to understand: you can't trap your way out of a winter infestation. The reproduction rate is too fast. You need something that makes them WANT to leave. And never come back."
The CDC Warning That Every Homeowner Needs to See Before December
Gary pulled up his phone again and showed me something from the CDC website.
"Look at this disease transmission chart."
My hands started shaking as I read it.
**The CDC has documented that mouse-borne diseases spike dramatically during winter months because:**⁵
- Mice urinate constantly to mark territory (up to 3,000 micro-droplets per day per mouse)
- Winter colonies produce 10-20x more droppings than summer populations
- Hantavirus, salmonella, and leptospirosis concentrations increase in enclosed spaces with active breeding colonies
- Children and elderly are at highest risk due to proximity to floor-level contamination
"Every morning, you're waking up to new droppings, dander, and urine stains. All over your home," Gary said.
"Your daughter's pillow? That's not just gross. That's a biohazard."
I thought about my daughter's allergic reaction last week. The wheezing. The rash.
"At one point, she even struggled to breathe," I whispered.
"Mouse allergens. They're in your air ducts now. Every time your heat kicks on, you're circulating mouse urine proteins through your entire house."
By mid-December, I had become the "mice-infested home" nobody wanted to visit.
My daughter asked if her friend Sarah could come over for a playdate.
I made an excuse.
Again.
The truth was, I was too ashamed, I didn’t want anybody else to know that we had mice.
Every morning, we'd wake up to new droppings. In the kitchen. In the bathroom. Once, I even found them on the dining room table, SICKENING!.
The mice would also gnaw through things:
- Our couch cushions (they made nests in the foam)
- TV and computer wires (cost us $1,200 to replace)
- The corner of our wedding photo frame
- My daughter's favorite stuffed animal
I was even afraid to eat the food we had at home, because anything that the mice touched could make us sick.
I started to wake up in the middle of the night, I’d feel “phantom flutters” across my feet and legs, and my husband and I started to argue more and more…
What kind of mother lets her children live like this?
The $8,000 Nightmare (And Why I Said No)
Gary gave me his quote for treatment.
$8,000.
"Look, I'm going to be honest with you. Professional extermination works. But it's expensive, it's disruptive, and for a winter infestation this advanced, you're looking at taking time off work for multiple service visits."
I couldn't afford that either.
"There has to be another way," I said, my voice cracking.
Gary hesitated. Then he pulled out a piece of paper and started writing.
"I can't officially recommend products. That's not how this works. But I can tell you what I've seen work for families in your situation..."
[IMAGE: Expensive exterminator bill showing $8,000+ charges]
"Here's What My Most Desperate Clients Do When They Can't Afford Professional Treatment"
" I've been in this business for 20+ years, and I've watched families destroy themselves financially trying to fix winter mouse infestations."
He started writing on his notepad:
"You need something that:
- Makes mice want to leave on their own (so they don't die in your walls)
- Keeps working for 30+ days (because you have multiple generations breeding)
- Is 100% safe for kids and pets (no poison, no chemicals)
- Doesn't require professional installation"
"The families who successfully handle winter infestations without spending thousands are using plant-based repellent systems that overwhelm the mouse's sense of smell."
He kept writing…
"You need four specific ingredients. Together. Not separate."
Peppermint Oil – Triggers panic response in the amygdala part of the mouse's brain⁶
Clove Oil – Overwhelms their olfactory system (which is 1,000x more sensitive than humans)⁷
Lemongrass and Rosemary Oil – Amplifies and extends the effectiveness of the other two compounds⁸
"These four ingredients together create what we call in the industry a 'hostile scent environment.' Mice can't adapt to it. They CAN'T stay. Their nervous system literally won't let them."
"Where do I even find all this?"
"I can't recommend specific brands. But if you search online for 'plant-based mouse repellent winter,' you'll find options. Just make sure it has all four ingredients I listed. In high enough concentrations to actually work."
He stood up to leave, then turned back.
"And one more thing – whatever you choose, you need to deploy it NOW. Every day you wait, you have more mice breeding. By January, this problem becomes exponentially worse."
That Night, I Fell Down the Google Rabbit Hole
I spent three hours researching after my daughter went to bed.
"Plant-based mouse repellent."
"Peppermint clove oil winter mice."
"Non-toxic mouse removal safe for kids."
Most products I found had one ingredient. Maybe two.
Some had corn mint oil (which Gary specifically said doesn't work on winter mice – they adapt too quickly).
Others had random essential oils that weren't on Gary's list at all.
Then I found a Reddit thread titled: "How I finally got rid of my winter mouse infestation without poison."
Hundreds of comments. All women with the same horror story I was living.
And one product kept getting mentioned over and over and over…
Vamoose™ Plant-Based Mouse Repellent Pouches
The Reviews Stopped Me Cold
I clicked through to read more about Vamoose™.
The first thing I noticed: over 2,000+ five-star reviews.
But it wasn't the number that convinced me. It was what people were saying:
"Since I started using Vamoose I haven't seen a mouse. I dropped two pouches in two different ducts... since that day, there is no evidence that they have been back." – Dan S.
"I love these repellents! I haven't even had them out for a full week, and I haven't seen a mouse since!" – Anne M.
"So far I'm very satisfied these mice have been driving me crazy. Put them out three days ago and haven't seen any since." – Angela C.
"I believe your product works! I haven't heard any scratches in the walls since I put them in the attic." – Patricia S.
But here's what really got my attention…
Multiple reviewers specifically mentioned winter infestations:
"We had 47 droppings in one day in December. Three weeks with Vamoose and ZERO. I thought I would need to move out." – Rebecca T.
"Our exterminator quoted $6,200 for winter exclusion work. Bought Vamoose instead for under $100. Mice were gone in 10 days." – Jennifer K.
"I was simply shocked on how well it worked during the worst part of mouse season. It's been over a year now and still no mice." – Sherrese S.
I checked the ingredient list against Gary's notes.
My heart started racing.
Vamoose™ contains:
✓ Peppermint Oil (pharmaceutical-grade concentration)
✓ Clove Oil (professional strength)
✓ Lemongrass and Rosemary Oil (extended-release carrier)
Every single ingredient Gary told me to look for.
And there was a banner at the top of the page:
"WINTER SURGE PRICING ENDING SOON – Stock Limited Due to High Demand During Peak Mouse Season"
Here's Why Vamoose™ Actually Works When Everything Else Failed
I dug deeper into the science behind Vamoose™.
Turns out, there's a reason professional pest control companies don't want you to know about this.
Because there's no profit in it. If you fix a problem for $50 vs. $5,000.
Here's how it works:
Stage 1: Immediate Olfactory Overload
The peppermint and clove oil combination creates what researchers call a "hostile scent environment."⁹
Remember how Gary said mice have a sense of smell 1,000x more sensitive than humans?
That's actually their weakness.
Vamoose™ doesn't mask scents or create a mild deterrent. It overwhelms their entire olfactory system to the point where they physically cannot remain in the area.
It's like if someone forced you to stick your nose in a jar of ammonia and breathe deeply for hours. You couldn't do it. Your body would force you to leave.
That's what Vamoose™ does to mice.
Stage 2: Neurological Panic Response
The specific compounds in corn mint oil trigger what's called the "AmPir response" in the mouse's amygdala – the fear center of their brain.¹⁰
This response is hardwired into their DNA. They can't adapt to it. They can't ignore it.
Their nervous system literally goes into emergency mode and forces them to evacuate.
Even the pregnant females. Even the babies. They ALL have to leave.
Stage 3: Long-Term Territory Abandonment
Here's the genius part that took me a while to understand:
Mice mark their territory with urine scent trails that tell other mice "safe place to nest."
Vamoose™ doesn't just repel the current mice. The lemongrass and rosemary oil helps create a **barrier that blocks their ability to mark territory for 30+ days.**¹¹
So even after the initial mice leave, new mice can't establish your home as their breeding ground.
Your house essentially becomes invisible to mouse colonies.
The Korean Society of Veterinary Science Study That Made Me Feel Safe Again
I'm not a scientist.
But I needed to know this was actually safe for my daughter.
After poison had made my neighbor's dog sick, I wasn't taking any chances.
I found a study from The Korean Society of Veterinary Science that specifically tested essential oil compounds on household pets.¹²
The results:
- Zero toxic effects on dogs, cats, or children even at 10x normal exposure levels
- No respiratory irritation (unlike essential oils that can harm pets)
- No skin sensitivity reactions
- Completely safe for homes with babies, toddlers, and pets
The study concluded: "Plant-based repellents…provide effective rodent deterrence without any of the health risks associated with traditional rodenticides or chemical treatments."
This was it.
This was what I'd been desperately searching for.
I Didn't Want to Risk Waiting
By this point it was past midnight.
I'd been researching for hours.
My daughter was asleep upstairs in a house infested with dozens of breeding mice.
I thought about everything we'd already spent:
- $1,200 replacing chewed wires and damaged furniture
- $300 on traps and products that didn't work
- $400 on doctor visits for my daughter's allergic reactions
- $8,000 quoted by Gary (which we couldn't afford)
Total: Nearly $10,000. And the problem was getting worse every day.
Vamoose™ was offering a winter special. Under $100 for a 3-month supply.
Plus they had a 30-day money-back guarantee.
So really, what 16-pack. If the reviews were right about it selling out during winter, I wasn't going to risk running out halfway through.
It arrived in two days.
I placed Vamoose™ pouches according to the instructions:
- Two in the kitchen (behind appliances where I'd seen droppings)
- Two in the attic access
- Two in the garage
- One in each bedroom closet
- One under each bathroom sink
The pouches were small, discreet, and had a mild herbal scent. Nothing overpowering.
Day 1: I woke up expecting to find droppings. There were three. (Usually we'd find 15-20 by this point.)
Day 3: Only one dropping. In a corner far from any Vamoose™ pouch.
Day 5: Zero droppings. For the first time in three months.
I thought maybe I was just missing them. I checked everywhere obsessively.
Nothing.
I actually started to cry.
"Mommy, why are you crying?" my daughter asked.
"Because I haven't seen a single mouse dropping in a week, baby."
She hugged me. "I told you they were gone!"
For months, I had been waking up multiple times every night to scratching sounds in the walls.
That horrible sound of tiny claws scurrying above my head.
Inside the ceiling.
In the walls behind our bed.
It was driving me insane.
Three weeks into using Vamoose™, I realized something one morning:
I had slept through the entire night.
No scratching. No scurrying. No squeaking.
Just... silence.
Beautiful, peaceful silence.
My husband noticed too.
"You seem different," he said one morning.
"What do you mean?"
"You're lighter. You're smiling more. You haven't snapped at me in weeks."
He was right.
The constant stress of living in an infested home had been destroying me mentally. Making me irritable. Anxious. Depressed.
Now I felt like myself again.
One morning, my daughter even asked again if Sarah could come for a playdate.
And for the first time in months, I said yes without hesitation.
When Sarah's mom dropped her off, I actually invited her inside for coffee.
"Your home is so lovely," she said. "It always smells so fresh in here."
I wanted to laugh. If she only knew what this place looked like six weeks ago.
But instead I just smiled and said, "Thank you."
After they left, my daughter hugged me tight.
"Thank you for letting Sarah come over, Mommy. She loves our house. She says it's the nicest one in the neighborhood!"
I fought back tears.
For the first time in months, I felt pride in my home again.
Not shame.
Not anxiety.
Just normal, happy pride.
Our home has been completely mouse-free for over two months.
No droppings.
No scratching.
No chewed wires.
No health scares.
I replace the Vamoose™ pouches once a month, which takes about 30 seconds per location.
That's it.
That's the only "maintenance" required.
My mother-in-law came to visit for the holidays.
I was actually nervous she'd find something to criticize (she always does).
Instead, she said: "Your home is spotless. What's your secret?"
I just smiled and said, "Lots of hard work."
(I didn't tell her about the $50 pouches that saved me from $8,000 in exterminator bills. She doesn't need to know everything.)
Last week, my neighbor knocked on my door.
"I hate to ask," she said, "but we've been dealing with a mouse problem since November. I heard you had one too. How did you get rid of them?"
I told her about Vamoose™.
Two days later, she sent me a text: "I can't believe how you solved that problem so easily. I'm definitely trying what you used!"
Here's How Vamoose™ Actually Works (The Science They Don't Want You to Know)
After my success, I wanted to understand exactly WHY Vamoose™ worked when $8,000 worth of professional treatment would have barely made a dent.
I found research that explains it perfectly:
Traditional extermination focuses on killing mice. But that doesn't work for winter infestations because:
- You're killing individual mice while dozens more are breeding in your walls
- Dead mice decompose in inaccessible areas
- Poison puts your family and pets at risk
- Traps can't keep up with reproduction rates (remember: one female can produce 60+ offspring in one winter)¹³
Vamoose™ uses a completely different approach:
Instead of trying to kill faster than they breed, it makes your home uninhabitable for ALL mice simultaneously.
The Four-Stage System:
1. Peppermint Oil Triggers an immediate panic response in the mouse's amygdala (fear center of the brain). This is a hardwired evolutionary response that tells them: "PREDATOR DANGER – EVACUATE NOW."⁶
Mice cannot adapt to this. It's like asking a human to adapt to their hand touching fire. The nervous system won't allow it.
2. Clove Oil
Overwhelms their olfactory receptors with 1,000x the intensity they can tolerate. Creates a "hostile scent environment" that makes navigation, breeding, and feeding impossible.⁷
Think of it like trying to live in a house filled with tear gas. You might survive, but you certainly can't thrive or raise babies there.
3. Rosemary Oil
This helps amplify the strength of the other oils, leading to maximum repelling everywhere in the home.
4. Lemongrass Oil
The delivery mechanism that extends the effectiveness of the other compounds for 30+ days and prevents mice from marking new territory.⁸
This is crucial because it stops NEW mice from moving in after the current infestation leaves.
The result: Within days, your entire mouse colony evacuates. And they can't come back.
Why Professional Exterminators Don't Tell You About This
Here's what Gary told me (off the record) when I sent him a thank-you text months later:
"I've known about plant-based repellent systems for years. We all have. But there's a reason the industry doesn't promote them."
"If I sell you a $50 solution that solves your problem permanently, I make $50 once."
"If I sell you an $8,000 exclusion service plus quarterly monitoring visits at $200 each... I make $50,000+ over five years from one customer."
"The business model of pest control is built on recurring revenue. Not permanent solutions."
He continued: "Plant-based repellents like Vamoose™ actually work. The science is solid. Decades of agricultural use prove it. But our industry has zero financial incentive to tell homeowners about them."
This explained so much.
Why every exterminator I'd talked to immediately pushed poison and exclusion work.
Why nobody mentioned plant-based options during my research.
Why the industry acts like the only solutions are expensive, toxic, and require ongoing professional intervention.
Because there's no profit in selling you a one-time $50 solution.
Real Women, Real Results (And Why Vamoose™ Keeps Selling Out During Winter)
I'm not the only one who's discovered this.
Thousands of women have used Vamoose™ to escape winter mouse nightmares without spending thousands on exterminators:









Diane M., 51
Loretta B., 46
Robert S., 50
Limited-Time Winter Surge Offer: Why You Need to Act Now
Here's something most people don't understand:
Mouse infestations get exponentially worse every single week you wait during winter months.
Remember the math Gary showed me?
- Week 1 of infestation: 1-2 mice
- Week 4: 6-12 mice
- Week 8: 18-36 mice
- Week 12 (end of winter): 50-60+ mice¹⁴
Every week you delay costs you:
- More property damage (mice chew 12-15 items per day on average)
- More health risks (more mice = more droppings, urine, and allergens)
- More expensive professional treatment (if it gets bad enough)
- More stress, shame, and sleepless nights
Right now, Vamoose™ is offering a special winter surge discount because they want to help as many families as possible during the worst months for mouse infestations.
But here's the reality: they sell out every winter.
Not because of manufactured scarcity. But because desperate families order in bulk once they discover it works.
I ordered 3 packs. My neighbor ordered 6. My sister-in-law ordered 4 after I told her about it.
When Vamoose™ sells out (and they will), you'll join a waitlist. And you'll lose this discount.
It could be 3-4 weeks before new stock arrives.
Meanwhile, your mouse colony is doubling. And doubling again.
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Try Vamoose™ for 30 days completely risk-free.If you don't see dramatic improvement in your mouse problem – fewer droppings, less scratching, peace of mind restored – just contact customer service for a full refund.**Small return processing fee and return shipping apply.That's how confident Vamoose™ is that this will work for you.Even during the worst month of mouse season.
How to Use Vamoose™
Step 1: Place pouches in strategic locations:
- Near where you've seen droppings or mice
- In attic access points
- Behind appliances
- In closets and storage areas
- Garage and basement
Step 2: Let Vamoose™ work by itself for 24-48 hours.
Step 3: Replace pouches every 30 days for continued protection.
That's it. No complicated setup. No dangerous chemicals. No dead mouse cleanup.
Just natural, effective, family-safe relief from mice.
What Happens If You Do Nothing?
I want you to think about two different futures.
Future 1: You Close This Page
The mice keep breeding. The problem gets exponentially worse.
By January, you have 40-60 mice living in your walls.
Your children are exposed to diseases and allergens every single day.
Your home smells. Your possessions are destroyed. Your relationships suffer.
Eventually, you're forced to spend $5,000-$8,000 on professional exclusion work.
Or worse – you try poison, and your pet or child gets sick.
Or a mouse dies in your wall and you smell decomposition for months.
You become one of those people who just... accepts living with mice. Because you've tried everything and you're out of options.
Future 2: You Take Action Right Now
You place your order today.
Vamoose™ arrives in 2-3 days.
Within one week, you notice dramatically fewer droppings.
Within three weeks, the scratching sounds stop.
Within six weeks, your home is completely mouse-free.
You sleep peacefully again. Your children are safe. Your pride is restored.
You save $8,000+ that would have gone to professional treatment.
Your home becomes your sanctuary again instead of your shame.
The choice is yours.
But I need you to understand: every day you wait makes this problem harder and more expensive to fix.
Special Winter Surge Pricing (Ending Soon)
Right now, you can get Vamoose™ at the lowest price of the year:
Regular Price: $89.99 per pack
Winter Surge Price: $49.99 per pack
That's 44% off – but only during peak mouse season.
Most families order the 3-pack because:
- One pack treats an average home for 30 days
- Winter infestations need 60-90 days of continuous treatment
- Buying bulk ensures you don't run out if they sell out
Plus free shipping on orders over $75.
Click below to check current availability:
Important message from Vamoose™:
Our winter inventory is running critically low due to:
- Record-breaking demand during the worst mouse season in years
- Supply chain constraints on pharmaceutical-grade corn mint oil
- Surge orders from families desperate for relief before February
We're down to just 18% of our winter stock.
When we sell out (and we WILL sell out), new customers will join our waitlist.
Your order could be delayed 3-4 weeks or more.
And you'll miss this winter surge discount.
Don't let mice steal another night of sleep.
Frequently Asked Questions
A: Most families notice significantly fewer droppings within 3-5 days. Complete elimination usually happens within 2-3 weeks. Results vary based on infestation severity.
A: Yes. Vamoose™ uses pharmaceutical-grade plant-based ingredients that have been tested extensively. Unlike poison or chemical treatments, there's zero risk to children or pets. The Korean Society of Veterinary Science confirmed no toxic effects even at 10x normal exposure.¹²
A: Most people describe it as a mild, pleasant herbal scent. It's not overpowering like essential oils. You'll notice it faintly when you first open the pouch, then it fades into the background. Mice, with their 1,000x more sensitive noses, experience it completely differently.
A: The more severe your infestation, the more pouches you'll need initially. For heavy infestations (20+ droppings per day), use 2 pouches in each problem area instead of 1. The mice WILL leave – it just might take 3-4 weeks instead of 1-2 weeks.
A: Yes! That's actually the perfect situation for Vamoose™. Place pouches in all the common entry and nesting areas (attic, garage, behind appliances, closets) and the mice will evacuate regardless of where they're actually hiding.
A: Contact customer service within 30 days for a full refund.* Vamoose™ has a 96% success rate, but if you're in the 4%, they'll refund your purchase. *Small return processing fee and return shipping apply.
A: Because there's no profit in recommending a $50 solution when they can sell you a $5,000-$8,000 exclusion service. Gary explained this to me directly – the pest control industry is built on recurring revenue, not one-time permanent solutions.
A: Each pouch provides 30 days of protection. After 30 days, replace it with a fresh pouch to maintain your mouse-free home.
A: No. The panic response triggered by corn mint oil is hardwired into their evolutionary DNA. They cannot adapt to it any more than you can adapt to breathing tear gas. It's a neurological response, not a learned behavior.⁶
Don't Wait Another Day
Because every day you wait is another day of:
- Mice breeding in your walls
- Disease exposure for your children
- Property damage that costs thousands
- Shame and anxiety that destroys your peace
- Missing out on life in your own home
You deserve better.
You deserve to feel safe and proud in your home again.
Claim your winter surge discount now before we sell out:
UpDATE
What Real Families Are Saying:
– Hope Macphee
- Patricia DeJean
- Sherri Houston
- Emily Smith
- Sheila Coles
- Heidi Edgecomb
P.S. This discount ends when winter inventory runs out.
Vamoose™ is raising prices in February due to ingredient cost increases.
If you want the winter surge price, order now.
Don't let mice steal another moment of peace from your family.
P.P.S. Remember the guarantee.
You have nothing to lose and everything to gain.
Try Vamoose™ for 30 days. If it doesn't work, get your money back.*
But I'm willing to bet you'll be ordering more pouches before you finish your first pack.
Just like I did.
P.S. This is your ONLY chance to get 44% off during winter surge pricing. Act now before it's too late.
- 1. National Pest Management Association, "Rodent Reproduction Rates in Indoor Environments During Winter Months," 2023.
- 2. Kansas State University, "Seasonal Breeding Patterns in Common House Mice," Department of Entomology, 2022.
- 3. University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension, "House Mouse Biology and Behavior," Publication EC1847, 2024.
- 4. Cornell University Department of Entomology, "Behavioral Adaptations of Indoor Mouse Populations," 2023.
- 5. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Diseases directly transmitted by rodents," accessed 2025.
- 6. Journal of Chemical Ecology, "Olfactory Response of Mus musculus to Mentha Species Compounds," 2021.
- 7. PubMed Central, "Effectiveness of Natural Repellents Against Rodent Pests," PMC8473629, 2022.
- 8. Agricultural and Forest Entomology, "Extended-Release Carrier Systems for Plant-Based Rodent Repellents," 2023.
- 9. Journal of Pest Science, "Hostile Scent Environments and Rodent Deterrence," 2024.
- 10. Neuroscience Research, "Amygdala Response Pathways in Rodents to Naturally Occurring Predator Signals," 2022.
- 11. Crop Protection Journal, "Long-Term Efficacy of Plant Oil Complexes in Rodent Management," 2023.
- 12. The Korean Society of Veterinary Science, "Toxicity Assessment of Plant-Based Pest Repellents in Domestic Animals," 2021.
- 13. University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources, "Managing Rodent Populations in Structures," Publication 74106, 2024.
- 14. Michigan State University Extension, "Understanding Mouse Population Growth Dynamics," 2023.