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Mice

Ivan

New member
We have a White mountain Yurt in Middle New Hampshire, and were getting reports regarding a huge mice infestation.. At the time we where working in Singapore, so not much could be done until we returned. Once we got back mid Feb. we immediately went to the yurt for a more in depth inspection. All I could see, is that where the bottom of the material shell is screwed into the side of the platform through grommets every 6 inches, in some places there are spaces where the shell material had bunched up, so maybe this is where the entrances are. The mice than work themselves between the insulation interior and the outside shell and have eaten a hole through the insulation or even worse, ate a hole through the screen and then into the Yurt? So I wrapped a 1" strap around the Yurt just above the grommets and ratched it tight which compressed those openings.. Also, sprayed peppermint spray and sprinkled crushed chill pepper around the interior base. No mice for the past 2 weeks. So I would like to know if folks have had the same experience, and what their solutions were? as well as how do you replace sections of screen with 1" holes , that would allow a platoon of New Hampshire mosquitoes in this summer?
 
Hi Ivan,

As a kid growing up in the Appalachian mountains we often had holes in the screens, and all our neighbors did as well.

It was common to cut an oversize piece of screen (these were metal screens) and use some wire from the edge of a piece of screen and "sew" a patch over the hole.

I can't see any reason that wouldn't work with a yurt screen, and using a needle, I think it would be even easier that darning a metal screen.

Give it a try, and good luck avoiding future infestations. Hopefully you avoided those monster sized cockroaches in Singapore.

Rod
rod::email::yurtlocker.com
Home Page.
 
Hi Ivan,

I also live in NH and have had mice issues in the past. What helped me is plastic or other hard containers* for all food the mice might be attracted to and clearing brush and other stuff away from under and around the outside of the yurt.

Mice like to travel with protective cover. Any animal will take risks if the rewards are worth it. You just have to make the risks greater and the rewards less.

I didn't have to do anything to the actual yurt. Screening is an option as that will stop them, but getting through the canvas is easy. There will always be a canvas spot above the screening for them to chew through and gain entrance. I actually prefer any enterprising mouse to squeeze through the layers at the bottom (easy) and not chew holes in my canvas (not much harder).

*$10 bucks for 12, quart canning jars! Also come in pint, 1/2 gallon, and other sizes. Strong, inert, cheap, see through. Can't beat canning jars for storage. I prefer to also buy the white plastic lids as they don't rust and are easier to use and clean as one piece.
 
Also. A quick, easy, attractive yurt project is attaching shelves between the 2x4 studs (if you have them). Then two eye hooks and a wooden dowel to slip between the eye hooks at the front as a "railing" to keep the canning jars from sliding off the shelves. It takes a bit of time to figure the right spacing. Which size jar are you using. Enough room to get the jar in and off the shelf*. But gets all those jars of rice, beans, nuts, peanut butter, whatever - neat and easy to see and access. Have built several for friends and family in "normal" homes - this storage system is so attractive and convenient. And cheap!

*My shelves are 6.5" high for pint size jars and 10" for quart size
 
Here is a photo of the one chew hole.. The idea of threading a screen patch is great? definite try that out.. Also , a photo of shelving , but a little different as I notched the back of the shelves to encompass the snow load studs, But did not have the foresight to size the shelf spaces to specific mason jars, or the dowels? but definitely need to put some of these goodies away in wither tupperware of mason jars . The roaches are okay if you fry them long enough and add just bit of chili peppers :-)
 

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Not sure what happened to the shelf photo, other than the obvious.
 

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  • Yurt shelving or mice playhouse.jpg
    Yurt shelving or mice playhouse.jpg
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I actually used only one "section" of 2x4's as the vertical supports So smaller side to side width and only 3.5" wide, enough for one layer of jars. For the railing, insert an eye hook on the front of the vertical 2x4 about 3" up from the bottom of the shelf on each side. Then slide an appropriately sized wooden dowel (which only come in 3'(?) lengths) through the eye hooks and something to keep them in place. I drilled a small hole at the ends and slipped a toothpick through. Just keeps it from knocking out if you bump the "railing". But could also attach a hinged door to the front of you like that look. Would attach a picture, but don't know how. :(

At some point I want to do that for a floor to ceiling, thin storage area, but put a door on it and paint the hinged door, "wall" color - with angled lattice stain cris-crossing. Might look awful, but sometimes yurt interiors get so busy looking.
 
I tried the cockroaches fried with garlic, chili and basil. Frankly, I didn't care for them. The are just too goopy-pasty. The inside is the color and texture of flan, but not the taste. Yuck.

The grasshoppers and crickets prepared the same way are pretty tasty, but I have to get the wings and legs off of them, they get caught in my teeth, but the local Asian people happily crunch away on them, legs wings and all.

Our Thai friends used to love to eat wasp larva, as long as we didn't spray the nest with insecticide. They waited until after dark, and used a newspaper torch to clear the adults, and picked the larva out with a toothpick. Tasted like mild and honey they said, but I never got around to trying them. I end up spraying them usually, and after that it doesn't seem like such a good idea.

In Ecuador, we have a white, fat local grub about the size of your little finger, (well, my little finger), and it becomes a black beetle about an inch and a half long during the start of the rainy season. They are supposed to be pretty good, my wife says they are, I have not been there at the right time, but they are growing on our property there. They get about $16 a 500 gram (If I remember, 454 grams is a pound), bag for the beetles, live if possible.

I read somewhere online that Mexico eats the greatest number of insects of any country in the world. Maybe all those worms from the bottom of the mescal bottle? :)

A little off topic, but it happens sometimes.

Rod
rod::email::yurtlocker.com
Home Page.
 
I would try it once (though dunno about the cockroach), but I am also dubious if I would make that a staple of my diet lol..
 
I'm anglo. I've always like like ethnic women, even when I was in seventh grade I had a jr high crush on Brenda Coffee, who was black. Still remember her all these decades later very fondly. But skip back forty years to when I was 22, lets say I was seeing a Thai chick that I was totally nuts about, well nuts or not, I wouldn't eat a bug off a plate she or her Mom and Dad slid in front of me, to test me out. I DID once quit eating meat because of a vegan girlfriend, but that didn't last. I'm a meat and potatoes guy. So, I married a Portuguese girl. :D
 
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