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Mice In Cars? A Hastings solution: the car corral If you don’t have a mouse-proof garage for you car, you may be in for some trouble. Living in a
natural area, we keep finding mice in our cars, often even if we only
park a car overnight. It seems the US and Japanese car manufacturers
are so far out of touch with nature that they build cars as if they would
never see a wild mouse. Hoods are insulated with cardboard that makes
great nest material. Vents open to the air in such a way that mice can
climb up in the air ducts of the car and get stuck deep in the guts of
the dashboard and die. The smell of a rotting mouse on a 95°F day
is enough to ruin any appreciation you ever had for your vehicle. That
smell can last for months when you turn on the air blower. The damage
mice do to wiring, glove boxes, hoses, and insulation can be extreme.
Mechanics at a Monterey auto repair shops report costs of up to $1,500
per car for damage by mice to wiring, or taking apart the entire air
conditioning duct system in the dashboard, or worse. Not that mice are entirely free of things that get into them (photo); they often have these fly larvae that burrow into their skin and develop into a relatively huge lump on the mouse and eventually a "bot" fly.
We have tried
a number of what turned out to be useless rural mythological techniques
to keep mice out of cars. These include aromatic bars of soap, mothballs,
electronic ultrasonic beepers, other dead mice, and a variety of commercial
predator scents. Cats are often useless; deer mice are amazing climbers The only hope is to build a physical barrier. Nearly 30 years ago, I experimented with mice* and found a way to contain them (see figure). The trick was an overhang of smooth metal. I used aluminum flashing nailed at right angles to the top of a fence. Mice could not cross the fence in either direction. I suppose you could build a large fenced area to store your car, but the gate would be a challenge. Here at Hastings, David Ribble built a similar fence in our streamside habitats, but it was just an upright aluminum fence. It kept the native deer mice in separate populations for years. Oddly, they would not walk around the fence; it went out in the open grassland and the mice did not venture out very far. They evidently could not, or would not, climb the smooth 24" tall aluminum flashing.
Then a few years ago, Feynner Arias , a kind man and natural area manager living in Big Sur, showed me a way to keep mice out of a car in storage (see photo). The same aluminum flashing that kept the mice out of the fenced area is also generally impossible for them to climb. But, having to dig the flashing out of the soil every time you moved the car seemed like a lot of work. We have a cement
pad where we park a car and I realized I could put the flashing in a
frame we could remove quickly each time (see photos). The corners are
shorter sections that fit in the curved groove I routered into the wood.
Just gently bend a 12" section of flashing to fit in the groove
and inside the long walls that meet at the corner. The groove and the
other walls will hold up the corner section. Clip the upper edges of
the inserted corner piece up at the top to make the outer joint between
the wall and corner piece seamless. It is critical that the overlap is
very smooth at the corners; remember the mice can climb up grass stems.
The clasps for the corners are purchased at a good hardware store. We
used 2x4 redwood with 12" flashing
and (eventually) even Gorilla glue failed to hold the flashing in
the groove. So, I simply toe-nailed 2" finish nails through the
flashing and into the wood, holding the nail gun down in the groove to
push the flashing outward at the base. We added shelf brackets to keep
the flashing from bending in the wind. We drilled a small hole in the
flashing at the top of each bracket and use some galvanized wire looped
through the holes in flashing to keep it attached to the top of each
bracket.
We built another corral where the boards are placed on gravel. For this corral, we recycled some flashing, and we remove only the one (rear) panel when we take the car out. See photos (below). When you have it on gravel, you must tamp the gravel back in place on returning the vehicle to the corral and occasionally along the other 3 sides. No holes under the gravel; mice like to burrow. For the past
2 years we have kept mouse traps open in the cars and have not caught
mice in the cars. To check on this, we occasionally have forgotten to
corral a car at night and sure enough, in the morning we have a mouse or two in the traps. If anyone is interested in developing my car corral into a commercial venture, I would be happy to partner and advise, do testing, etc. (stromberg@berkeley.edu). * Stromberg, M. R. 1979. Experimental analysis of habitat performance and observations of deermice (Peromyscus) in southern Wisconsin. Ph.D. Dissertation, Univ. Wisc. Madison. 224 pp.
Front corner; see also the photo below. This could be one, continuous piece of flashing as it doe not need to come apart when you move the car in or out.
The front part of the corral remains in one unit. I have a fiberglass pole to let me know I am in far enough to close the back. The corner panels are nailed in place (along the base) and I used some heavy aluminum tape to seal the outside edges so mice can't climb up the seam. Once could just continue with the flashing in one long section around the 3 sides; this part of the corral does not need to come apart each time you move the vehicle in or out.
Rear of corral. This rear board is removed each time the vehicle is take out of the corral. I just set it aside and then put it back later, tamping in the gravel where the wheels have pressed it down, so there is no tunnel under the board.
Others have built variations on this theme: here are some photos people have shared with me: |
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