Barrels
Active member
- First Name
- Steve
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2022
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 41
- Reaction score
- 26
- Location
- Washington
- Vehicles
- 2018 F150 3.5L
- Occupation
- Retired
- Thread starter
- #1
I live in a rural area and have mice and ground squirrels aplenty around. My ICE F150 suffered wire damage (NOX sensor) due to their chewing which was expensive to repair. Now with my new Lightning I see the same potential problem
I have motion sensor area lights, wheel well liners, and have tried bait, sonic repellers (several), flashing lights in the engine compartment of the ICE truck, dryer sheets and anything else I can think of short of trapping - thats next.
I have seen the squirrels get into the old truck through the wheel wells. The wheel well liners must leave room around the suspension for it to move and thats the weak spot in rodent defense. I am now aiming solar powered lights at those areas during the night. Not sure that will work and they are temporary for now.
Has anyone come up with a better solution to keeping the critters away from causing what I perceive will be a very expensive repair ? Especially in the wheel wells? I wonder if I can block them from climbing the tires.
I will be putting out the large rodent live trap today and try to reduce the nearby population. Note: the hawks and owls here are at work but too many people have shot the coyotes trying to protect their chickens so the natural predators are insufficient to do the job.
I have motion sensor area lights, wheel well liners, and have tried bait, sonic repellers (several), flashing lights in the engine compartment of the ICE truck, dryer sheets and anything else I can think of short of trapping - thats next.
I have seen the squirrels get into the old truck through the wheel wells. The wheel well liners must leave room around the suspension for it to move and thats the weak spot in rodent defense. I am now aiming solar powered lights at those areas during the night. Not sure that will work and they are temporary for now.
Has anyone come up with a better solution to keeping the critters away from causing what I perceive will be a very expensive repair ? Especially in the wheel wells? I wonder if I can block them from climbing the tires.
I will be putting out the large rodent live trap today and try to reduce the nearby population. Note: the hawks and owls here are at work but too many people have shot the coyotes trying to protect their chickens so the natural predators are insufficient to do the job.
Sponsored