Mice
Comments
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Keep a cat in it.
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How are the mice getting in. All our vent holes have quite substantial mesh on them.
we have kept our van at a storage pound for over ten years and never had a problem. Admittedly the longest it's been left between trips is about two months
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There's been more than one thread on this issue only very recently. The prevailing view on the biggest thread was that you need to set several traps in and around your van especially around the points that they are getting in but not inside the van itself.
This is not my ideal solution as I am ridiculously squeamish and I cannot deal with the carrion!
I had mice in my van last winter, but this was the only time in many years of using a storage site. Eventually I got rid by blocking up every conceivable entrance point with rags, cloths etc. This took some time and effort but seemed to work. I've had none this year.
My mechanic told me that spraying WD40 around entrance points works but I never had to resort to this so I cannot say if it is effective or not. I must say it sounds unlikely but he swore by it.
Provided you leave no trace of food, you may well be worrying needlessly in any event.
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There's been more than one thread on this issue only very recently. The prevailing view on the biggest thread was that you need to set several traps in and around your van especially around the points that they are getting in but not inside the van itself.
This is not my ideal solution as I am ridiculously squeamish and I cannot deal with the carrion!
I had mice in my van last winter, but this was the only time in many years of using a storage site. Eventually I got rid by blocking up every conceivable entrance point with rags, cloths etc. This took some time and effort but seemed to work. I've had none
this year.My mechanic told me that spraying WD40 around entrance points works but I never had to resort to this so I cannot say if it is effective or not. I must say it sounds unlikely but he swore by it.
Provided you leave no trace of food, you may well be worrying needlessly in any event.
Write your comments here... They are slippery customers to deal with at the best of times,wouldn't WD40 make them even more slippery!.
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WE've been lucky with our caravan but on a chartered yacht in Greece in September we had a stowaway. Traps did not work but an electonic rodent repellor was installed and the mouse jumped ship. Whatever you do do not put poison down. The thought of adead
mouse or even worse a rat deecaying somewhere doen't bear thinking about0 -
We also have a problem with mice in our caravan, this being the first time we have had to keep it in storage as opposed to in the garden. Have looked for every conceivable entrance point but cannot work out where they are getting in. Does anyone have any
clues? No food left in van at all. We have so far caught three mice in one trap checked and re set over period of a week, but this is not a long term solution.Thank you
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Try freshcab it is ano kill stuff it uses potanicols to drive them out it comes in teabag like poutch depending how big your van is I put three or four in difernt locers in the van it worcks a treat look on line or your RV suplyshop or cmpinworld.com justthink
no dedmice to cleanup or wors little zombemice in your vanJ&I0 -
You can get electronic devices that are said to keep them away. I don’t expect they work, but one might put your mind at rest, Fia. I think you’re worrying unnecessarily.
Write your comments here...They DO work, but mine are powered by the mains, 5 years and no mice, and we live in a rural area, plenty of mice about.There is a 9v battery powered one, but no experience of that.
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www.earthkind.com try this J&I
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Thank you everyone. I have also learnt that to put a bottle of peppermint oil with a rag soaked in the opening of the bottle and then place it under the caravan/motorhome is supposed to be very effective. We haven't had mice in our motorhome but the caravan
stored next to ours apparently had quite a few. We don't kep food in our motorhome when it is stored.0 -
We had mice in storage facility 3 yrs ago. I purchased can of expandable foam and squirted drop in every conceivable gap-crevice and cable entry points. This took a while co's the little b*****s can sqeeze in anywhere. I did NOT block up any grill/ mesh
vents beneath beds / heaters / cooker etc.Result. - 3 YRS free of the little peskies.
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Any hole that is big enough to poke a pencil into is accessible to a mouse. Cover the air vents with mesh, fold the mesh if necessary to make smaller holes, fix it with a staple gun. Don't block the vents though as they are a safelty feature. Check flexible
ducting on the heating system. Some of it may run under the floor outside the van. A split can allow access to a mouse. Remove all food including pet food and even sealed items like sauce sachets. Leave a tiny bit of food such as a biscuit fragment in
the middle of the floor, if it gets eaten you know there is still a mouse inside. This is what I did when we had mice in the van some years ago. It worked as they have never been back. Check the vent mesh yearly as it, and the staples, can rust and allow
access.0 -
have come on line to ask if anybody has had the plastic grip on their Alko hitchlock gnawed? Just taken the cover off our "pride and joy" to get ready for our first trip this year and the grip has had a right seeing to! The hitchlock cover has been on all
the time and secure yet the so and so has still managed to get underneath. Any ideas on how to avoid a re occurence?0 -
Not much nutrition in that, I would have thought.
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My guess is that is a rat not a mouse!. There must of been some attraction to the implement.Vermin do not like human odours although tolerate them,so there must be some other atractive agent on the implement . I am not an authority on this issue....just
a country boy.0 -
We have notices warning of mice and not to leave food etc in the van. We've been lucky and have not experienced a problem. (Hope I'm not going to regret writing that!!!) We've always been very caeful not to leave anything edible in the van - including
paper!David
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It's not just food that attracts mice. A caravan makes a lovely place to spend the winter months. They'll chew up all sorts of stuff to make their nest - sleeping bags, carrier bags and such. The biggest danger is that tney'll chew wiring which could cause
electrical problems - possibly serious ones - when you come to use appliances on your first spring outing. If you've had mice in the van all wiring should be carefully checked before use.0 -
Just found a mouse has been in our glove compartment. Entered via a vent from Engine. Fortunately apart from chewing a padded envelope no further damage done. Will now cover vent with wire netting.
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I have just discovered a similar problem after 10 years of being mice free. Over the winter a mouse (or two) has been happily nesting in my caravan and the mess caused was unbelievable! Having cleaned the van from top to bottom during a trip last week, within
days of my return the mouse has reappeared. I can't for the life of me work out how it is gaining access to the van, but I will set a trap to try to solve the problem.0