Go Back  Fodor's Travel Talk Forums > Destinations > Europe
Reload this Page >

A serious rat problem in Paris.

Search

A serious rat problem in Paris.

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 01:33 PM
  #21  
 
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 3,214
Likes: 0
Originally Posted by travelgourmet
I believe any city in Alberta qualifies.
Sure? Better not look too close...
Rats are distributed all over the globe, with the sole exception of the northernmost arctic regions and Antarctica.
quokka is offline  
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 01:35 PM
  #22  
 
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 78,320
Likes: 0
Washington DC has a rat problem too.
PalenQ is offline  
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 02:34 PM
  #23  
Original Poster
 
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 2,893
Likes: 0
Originally Posted by StCirq
This isn't anything new.
It was new to me.

Originally Posted by Macross
Egads, but NYC has a huge problem also.
In my 30+ years in NYC, I've never seen anything like this. On my way to Notre Dame, Pont Louis Philippe was covered with rats, scurrying from one side to the other. There were so many, you could barely see any street. From a distance, it looked like the surface of the street was moving. When I finally realized what I was seeing, I thought I was caught on a Paul Thomas Anderson film set, and he was shooting another version of Magnolia. Wild.

I feel sorry for grocery stores and food vendors. Those rats get everywhere. A serious health hazard.

Btw, rats don't scare me. We dissected them in high school biology class. Still, I'd prefer they not take over a favorite city.
NYCFoodSnob is offline  
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 02:43 PM
  #24  
5 Anniversary
 
Joined: Mar 2017
Posts: 3,566
Likes: 22
Originally Posted by PalenQ
Washington DC has a rat problem too.
Something for Macron and Trump to discuss. I bet Trump’s rats are bigger.
xcountry is offline  
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 02:50 PM
  #25  
 
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 3,214
Likes: 0
I saw a dead rat in the street two minutes from my house yesterday. If they are stupid enough to let themselves be run over by cars, there must be a serious over-population.
This is an average quarter in a perfectly normal mid-size German city, by the way. No dump or dirthole.

They are everywhere.
quokka is offline  
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 07:53 PM
  #26  
 
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 17,801
Likes: 0
I bet the reason no one is mentioning London in this admittedly unscientific roundup is the rise of urban foxes there. Humans create imbalances in nature, and then complain about the consequences.
NewbE is offline  
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 10:41 PM
  #27  
 
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,233
Likes: 0
Sometimes it's hard to get rid of them: https://www.atlasobscura.com/article...-massacre-1902
Nonconformist is offline  
Old Jan 23rd, 2018 | 11:35 PM
  #28  
 
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 4,760
Likes: 0
Hunting of rats on a TV programme called Engrenages (Sprial). Wikipedia IMBd is much better than the hunting of rats on NICS or CSI.
If you have missed it you can find the back catalogue online.
ribeirasacra is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 01:06 AM
  #29  
 
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,003
Likes: 0
Worked in Paris for 4 years in the 1990s, and lived just outside in Le Vesinet.

Can't recall ever seeing a rat.....just lots of dog muck everywhere...

https://www.frenchasyoulikeit.com/ex...dogs-in-paris/

Yukkie.
LancasterLad is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 01:27 AM
  #30  
15 Anniversary
 
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 3,084
Likes: 26
Vienna has rats, too. In fact, there is even a "Rat"haus for them.

My teen daughter and I spent a week in NYC in a not-too-distant February, along with her Slovenian BFF (first time to the US). BFF was "thrilled" to see a rat while we were waiting for a subway; it was something she could check off her NYC list. Not kidding.
fourfortravel is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 02:36 AM
  #31  
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 24,040
Likes: 6
Originally Posted by NYCFoodSnob
It was new to me.


In my 30+ years in NYC, I've never seen anything like this. On my way to Notre Dame, Pont Louis Philippe was covered with rats, scurrying from one side to the other. There were so many, you could barely see any street. From a distance, it looked like the surface of the street was moving. When I finally realized what I was seeing, I thought I was caught on a Paul Thomas Anderson film set, and he was shooting another version of Magnolia. Wild.

I feel sorry for grocery stores and food vendors. Those rats get everywhere. A serious health hazard.

Btw, rats don't scare me. We dissected them in high school biology class. Still, I'd prefer they not take over a favorite city.
I have seen very few rats over the years and almost always only if I am out past 1 a.m. which is rather rare for me these days. However, a friend of mine did report seeing one of those rat swarms next to the Tour Saint Jacques last summer.
kerouac is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 03:44 AM
  #32  
 
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 7,584
Likes: 1
I don't know if any of you geezers have read Elizabeth Kolbert's Pulitzer Prize winning book The Sixth Extinction, but in it one of the world's top scientists is quoted as saying that when man dies off rats will take over the world.

So, start thinking of Planet of the Rats, not Planet of the Apes.

Anybody remember the films Willard and Ben??

Thin
Pepper_von_snoot is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 08:03 AM
  #33  
 
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 26,778
Likes: 0
Originally Posted by quokka
Sure? Better not look too close...
Rats are distributed all over the globe, with the sole exception of the northernmost arctic regions and Antarctica.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...ticle27504057/

For all intents and purposes, Alberta is rat-free.
travelgourmet is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 09:08 AM
  #34  
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 5,238
Likes: 0
Originally Posted by travelgourmet
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...ticle27504057/

For all intents and purposes, Alberta is rat-free.
I’m pretty sure there are Alberta rats that are laughing in a bar somewhere. They’ve no doubt evolved and become better at hiding, ala the fantastic mr. Fox.

I’ve seen rats in the NYC subway. They’re usually out of sight, though. If I saw a swarm in Paris, I’d probably run screaming. Roommate in college had pet rats. I don’t even like them domesticated and bathed.
marvelousmouse is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 03:22 PM
  #35  
Original Poster
 
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 2,893
Likes: 0
Looks like the River Seine is up to its bridges, breaking a few burst records. This BBC article mentions that the water is flooding rat nests. I guess that explains the swarms running for their lives.

In pictures: River Seine bursts banks in Paris - BBC News
NYCFoodSnob is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 05:11 PM
  #36  
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 4,471
Likes: 0
A couple of years ago DH and I were exiting a subway in NYC when some lady started pointing at DH’s foot. There was a small rodent clinging to the cuff of his jeans. At the time I assumed it was a mouse, which was bad enough. But now, I am thinking it could have been a baby rat, which somehow just seems so much worse...
allisonm is offline  
Old Jan 24th, 2018 | 07:00 PM
  #37  
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 37,459
Likes: 0
The first thing I thought of was Ratatouille when I was this thread. LOL Thankfully, my friend and I didn't see any when we were in Paris in October. Rats are every where and they are survivors. All you can do is beat them back as best you can.
It's not just cities either. My brother lives out in the countryside and stopped feeding the birds when he watched the rat parade to the feeder one evening. As stated, they are everywhere.
crefloors is offline  
Old Jan 25th, 2018 | 04:45 AM
  #38  
 
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 26,778
Likes: 0
Originally Posted by marvelousmouse
I’m pretty sure there are Alberta rats that are laughing in a bar somewhere. They’ve no doubt evolved and become better at hiding, ala the fantastic mr. Fox.
If they are hiding so well that they aren’t seen, I think we can all agree that Alberta does a better job than Paris.

And that is the point: Paris has a rat problem. By many accounts, it is a quite significant one. Authorities can either hide behind “every city has rats” (which probably isn’t true) or they can look to how Calgary and Edmonton attack the problem. I know which I’d choose.
travelgourmet is offline  
Old Jan 25th, 2018 | 05:13 AM
  #39  
5 Anniversary
 
Joined: Mar 2017
Posts: 3,566
Likes: 22
Things I learned on Fodors:

Slow down!
JET LAG Jet Lag jet lag zzzzzzz ... don’t drive.
Rats are everywhere - shrug.
xcountry is offline  
Old Jan 25th, 2018 | 06:04 AM
  #40  
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 24,040
Likes: 6
Originally Posted by travelgourmet
And that is the point: Paris has a rat problem. By many accounts, it is a quite significant one. Authorities can either hide behind “every city has rats” (which probably isn’t true) or they can look to how Calgary and Edmonton attack the problem. I know which I’d choose.
The biggest problem that Paris has is that as the most visited city in the world and people will jump on any excuse to trash it in the media, while often ignoring that the problem in the own place of residence is just as bad or worse.

How many times have we read "is it safe to go to Paris?" from people living in cities with ten or twenty times the crime rate.

Does Paris have rats? Yes, it does, just like everywhere else. Are they jumping into people's laps in the restaurants? Has anyone been bitten on the Eiffel Tower yet? Have any babies had their faces chewed off in their cribs? I've read about things like this in other places, but it never made a huge splash in the news.

Last edited by kerouac; Jan 25th, 2018 at 06:06 AM.
kerouac is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement -