Living in a wildland or rural areas means that sometimes we have to park a car for a week or so. This never was a problem with the old cars, but new cars? You bet. Sometimes overnight, mice climb into the cars and are trouble. They can chew your wires, make nests (these catch on fire when you drive off) or die (Oh, the smell..!). We have had a number of inquiries about how to keep mice out of your car. For a longer article of this, click here. Basically, mice cannot climb a very smooth surface like aluminum flashing. Building a small, movable wall around your vehicle may be a solution for you.
Saturday, August 12, 2006
Living in a wildland or rural areas means that sometimes we have to park a car for a week or so. This never was a problem with the old cars, but new cars? You bet. Sometimes overnight, mice climb into the cars and are trouble. They can chew your wires, make nests (these catch on fire when you drive off) or die (Oh, the smell..!). We have had a number of inquiries about how to keep mice out of your car. For a longer article of this, click here. Basically, mice cannot climb a very smooth surface like aluminum flashing. Building a small, movable wall around your vehicle may be a solution for you.
Ever see a red blotch moving across the ground? Get closer and it may reveal itself as a “velvet ant”. Indeed; it is not an ant all, but a wasp; (Dasymutilla occidentalis; Hymenoptera: Mutillidae). And the females have a huge stinger. Some folks call them “cow killers” based on how this stinger works. The red coloration and their slow, oblivious walk