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-   -   Any cure for Squirrels eating antenna cables (https://www.radiobanter.com/antenna/200-any-cure-squirrels-eating-antenna-cables.html)

Mike Coslo August 12th 03 01:04 AM

Roger Halstead wrote:


You want a thrill...I was landing my airplane ( a 3100#, High
performance/complex/retractable at the Gladwin Airport (GDW) one night
when a big doe decided she wanted to be on the other side of the
runway

http://www.rogerhalstead.com/833pics.htm (bout 243K)


Thanks for the link, Roger. Great web pages!


- Mike KB3EIA -


Reg Edwards August 12th 03 02:03 AM

Doc, tough little buggers, eh? I didn't realise squirrel meat needs
tenderising.


It's not tough normally, especially if they were roadkills and have
been out in the weather for a couple days.

In hot weather, do gourmets prefer to wait a few more days and enjoy the
maggots?



AA August 12th 03 02:22 PM

I was landing my airplane ( a 3100#, High
performance/complex/retractable at the Gladwin Airport (GDW) one night when a
big doe decided she wanted to be on the other side of the runway

Ouch....I've hit birds before (biggest...an owl...collapsed the leading edge on
the Luscombe) but a friend, landing on a private lighted strip one evening,
managed to turn 10 Black Angus cows into steak and hamburger. The owner forgot
to clear the field when he turned on the landing strip lights. The pilot and
passenger walked away, but the Beechcraft Bonanza (cousin to Roger's Debonair)
was totalled. Barbara, the pilot, said she didn't suspect a thing until
touchdown and one cow turned towards the approaching airplane. "Shining eyes"
is all she saw. Think she's vegetarian today!!! (joke)

As for the coax, I've use the sour apple stuff...local squirrels apparently
don't like it, and wander off to greener pastures. 'Course, when all else
fails, a .22 and some CB shells take care of the rest. Thank goodness for
living in the South and not living in a city.

A

Randy Chavis August 12th 03 04:30 PM

I guess that it could be a big problem..I live out in the country and i feed
the little guys all the time and have never had problems with them..I keep corn
in trays and spread out on the ground for them and have never had problems with
them eating coax...yes before you say "wait itll you stop feeding them"..I have
and have no bad things come of it..I have around 10 of them in the yard ever
morning and afternoon....
oh well just a thought..Give them something else to eat....sounds like they
may be hungry or they are lookingh for stuff to build nest....

Randy

ARS: WB4UNA
Randy Chavis
247 Goff Court
West Columbia
S.C. 29172


Dave Shrader August 12th 03 09:20 PM

Bird feeders!!!

I set up some 'squirrel feeders' in the yard but the birds eat the seeds!!!

Deacon Dave, W1MCE

Rick wrote:
I have the same problem with my bird feeders,



Sylvan Butler August 12th 03 09:50 PM

On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 18:39:47 -0500, Dan/W4NTI wrote:
No Ed Senior I am not kidding. If your stray dog comes on my property and
chews up my yard, kills my cat, and attacks the neighborhood kid...Ill
shoot the SOB. IF I could get away with it in this populated area I would
have used te shotgun.


That's the way it works in my neighborhood. That's the law out
here, thank goodness.

sdb
n7owl
--
| Sylvan Butler | Not speaking for Hewlett-Packard | sbutler-boi.hp.com |
| Watch out for my e-mail address. Thank UCE. change ^ to @ |
It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral
busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his
cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our
own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval
of their consciences. -- C. S. Lewis

Sylvan Butler August 12th 03 10:03 PM

On Sat, 09 Aug 2003 16:23:10 GMT, Stuart wrote:
The squirrels here the my neighborhood have suddenly decided they like to
eat my coax and control cables. They seem to be particularly attracted to
the self-vulcanizing rubber used to seal the connections but they have eaten
some coax cables as well. Anyone know of a cure for this problem?


I wonder if you could put a few lines out with several hundred volts
relative to ground...

sdb

--
| Sylvan Butler | Not speaking for Hewlett-Packard | sbutler-boi.hp.com |
| Watch out for my e-mail address. Thank UCE. change ^ to @ |
It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral
busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his
cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our
own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval
of their consciences. -- C. S. Lewis

Art Unwin KB9MZ August 13th 03 12:52 AM

Why not put voltage on the coax to make it work like an electric fence?









Jim Kelley wrote in message ...
You aren't running a Beverage antenna by any chance, are you? Cuz, if
you give a squirrel a beverage........ :-)

jk

Stuart wrote:

Antenna Group~

The squirrels here the my neighborhood have suddenly decided they like to
eat my coax and control cables. They seem to be particularly attracted to
the self-vulcanizing rubber used to seal the connections but they have eaten
some coax cables as well. Anyone know of a cure for this problem?

Thanks

Stuart, ki6qp



Jimmy August 13th 03 01:50 AM

Only one bad thing about sending hunters out with guns for animal population
control. They dont take out the weak and those of poor genetic quality. They
tend to take those from the top of the herd. Only restoring the balance of
predatory animals will really solve the problem. BTW I am a deer hunter.

"Roger Halstead" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 09:29:49 -0400, "WB3FUP \(Mike Hall\)"
wrote:

Take a trip though Fairmont Park in Philly. Nothing green below 4 of 5
foot. Overpopulation is as much a problem as over hunting, a potentially
more serious to humans as diseased animals die..



Here they even have limited hunts in park areas and the city forrest
to reduce the over populations. Every time they do it's a battle with
the environmentalists. I guess they figure starving to death, or the
deer being killed by dogs or coyotes is more humane.

At least for the time being herd management and common sense is
prevailing.

I've not had any problems with squirrels getting into the coax...yet.
Maybe it's my cat chasing them (and the stray dogs) out of the yard.
Big cat. Hates dogs. Loves kids. Chased every dog in the
neighborhood home except one. They ever meet and I'll probably be
looking for a new cat, although he did get into a fight (attacked) a
full grown black lab that came in to the yard...and won.

The dog walked up behind the little neighbor girl and the cat went
ballistic.

When he was much younger he took in after a squirrel. The squirrel
went up a tree with the car right behind it. The squirrel bailed from
something like 25-30 feet up. The cat never slowed and went right
after him. However when the squirrel went up the next tree the cat
stopped at the bottom and just looked up.... I think he learned
something that day. :-)) driveways are pretty hard when hit from 30
feet up.

Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member)
www.rogerhalstead.com
N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2)






Jimmy August 13th 03 01:54 AM

Sqirrel is one of the 3 main ingredients of Brunswick stew, the other 2
being chicken and pork.

"Roger Halstead" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 01:21:08 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote:

Are squirrels edible ?


You bet and they are delicious if you can get past the idea of a
skinned one looks exactly like a rat. :-))

They are highly sought after during small game season in Michigan.

Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member)
www.rogerhalstead.com
N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2)







Jim Richardson August 13th 03 08:23 AM

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Hash: SHA1

On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 01:21:08 +0000 (UTC),
Reg Edwards wrote:
Are squirrels edible ?




Heck yeah! good tasting too! Although they take a couple for a full
meal. 22lr and a little patience is all you need. Although if you want
something to stop them chewing stuff. Try the hottest sauce you can
find, something way beyond tabasco. Like grim reaper or something. Just
smear it on the stuff to be protected.

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iD8DBQE/Oedjd90bcYOAWPYRAhF4AJsFBT1Byn7KUg3hud6XP8IY3Pdzuw CcDQ1b
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--
Jim Richardson http://www.eskimo.com/~warlock

Linux, because eventually, you grow up enough to be trusted with a fork()

Roger Halstead August 14th 03 09:05 PM

On Wed, 13 Aug 2003 00:50:34 GMT, "Jimmy"
wrote:

Only one bad thing about sending hunters out with guns for animal population
control. They dont take out the weak and those of poor genetic quality. They
tend to take those from the top of the herd. Only restoring the balance of
predatory animals will really solve the problem. BTW I am a deer hunter.


That's one of those ...well, yah, kinda, sorta, almost, ....things.
Nature is going to take care of the genetic problems. Without
predators the genetic errors don't usually last long.

As for the weak, reducing the size of the heard leaves more food for
them to get stronger. So even with harvesting the strong the herd
will get stronger.

Yet there is no real, or at least perfect answer...even with predatory
animals. That solution also cycles.

For instance the Fox population cycles greatly from a few healthy
animals to a great many when food is plentiful. Then Mange sweeps
through the fox population decimating it (if you haven't seen it, it
looks something like a terminal case of very painful dandruff). The
heard will drop from over population to almost a rarity in a year or
two. Then the rabbit and varmint populations explode. OTOH "as I
recall" it takes the Fox population about eight to ten years to
recover and then the cycle begins again

Here in the metropolitan area we have a huge coyote population, or at
least far more than most people realize. They prey on deer,
particularly the weak in infirm. They are also good at keeping the
stray cat population down..

Cats who run loose all the time, don't last long around here...nor do
dogs. We also have Bobcats and even this far south in the more highly
populated areas the occasional black bear waders into town.

Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member)
www.rogerhalstead.com
N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2)


"Roger Halstead" wrote in message
.. .
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 09:29:49 -0400, "WB3FUP \(Mike Hall\)"
wrote:

Take a trip though Fairmont Park in Philly. Nothing green below 4 of 5
foot. Overpopulation is as much a problem as over hunting, a potentially
more serious to humans as diseased animals die..



Here they even have limited hunts in park areas and the city forrest
to reduce the over populations. Every time they do it's a battle with
the environmentalists. I guess they figure starving to death, or the
deer being killed by dogs or coyotes is more humane.

At least for the time being herd management and common sense is
prevailing.

I've not had any problems with squirrels getting into the coax...yet.
Maybe it's my cat chasing them (and the stray dogs) out of the yard.
Big cat. Hates dogs. Loves kids. Chased every dog in the
neighborhood home except one. They ever meet and I'll probably be
looking for a new cat, although he did get into a fight (attacked) a
full grown black lab that came in to the yard...and won.

The dog walked up behind the little neighbor girl and the cat went
ballistic.

When he was much younger he took in after a squirrel. The squirrel
went up a tree with the car right behind it. The squirrel bailed from
something like 25-30 feet up. The cat never slowed and went right
after him. However when the squirrel went up the next tree the cat
stopped at the bottom and just looked up.... I think he learned
something that day. :-)) driveways are pretty hard when hit from 30
feet up.

Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member)
www.rogerhalstead.com
N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2)






Joe Strain August 14th 03 09:28 PM


Do they still sell sulfur candles...Solid sulfur and a binder in a what
looks like s SKOAL tin, with a wick.

We'd put that on a tin pieplate in the attic, light it off, and go out in
the yard for several hours

Everything in the attic would leave town or die

Yodar
=====================
"Mike Coslo" wrote in message

Heh! As one of the veterns of the squirrel versus human wars, I tried
the live trap route, and it doesn't work at all. You might catch one,
but that's about it. Here in the squirrel capital of central PA, we have
dozens of the little buggers. I had to seal up every opening in my
house, and seal the corner molding on my vinyl siding. Brats would climb
up there and munch a hole into the attic. Then they got in through the
triple walled chimney. I found that by chance. So I had to put wire
cloth on that. But wattya do about the ones who already got into the
attic? I made an escape route by drilling a hole in the side of the
house entering into the attic, and put a long narrow box over it so that
would jump out when they got thirsty and hungry enough. We're at a
standoff for the moment......

- Mike KB3EIA -




Roger Halstead August 14th 03 09:40 PM

On Tue, 12 Aug 2003 01:03:24 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote:

Doc, tough little buggers, eh? I didn't realise squirrel meat needs
tenderising.


It's not tough normally, especially if they were roadkills and have
been out in the weather for a couple days.

In hot weather, do gourmets prefer to wait a few more days and enjoy the
maggots?

Just think of them as mobile rice.

Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member)
www.rogerhalstead.com
N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2)


Mike Coslo August 14th 03 09:48 PM

Joe Strain wrote:
Do they still sell sulfur candles...Solid sulfur and a binder in a what
looks like s SKOAL tin, with a wick.

We'd put that on a tin pieplate in the attic, light it off, and go out in
the yard for several hours

Everything in the attic would leave town or die


Hmm, I've never seen one, but it sounds interesting. It would be
noxious enough, but after the smoke dissapeared, should be safe enough.

- Mike KB3EIA -


Reg Edwards August 14th 03 11:13 PM

This Earth, a tiny plot isolated in the vacuum of space, is already
overpopulated with people.

Its resources are being seriously depleted, polluted - food, clean air,
clean water, timber, oil.

But various facilities for selective culling have been available and
employed with ever-increasing efficiency for 58 years. Genetic Engineering
is being kept in reserve.

The question arises, who or what selects they who do the selecting ?



W5DXP August 14th 03 11:25 PM

Reg Edwards wrote:
But various facilities for selective culling have been available and
employed with ever-increasing efficiency for 58 years.


Hey, Reg, did you hear they've crossed a human and a rabbit
in China?
--
73, Cecil, W5DXP


Reg Edwards August 15th 03 12:45 AM

"W5DXP" wrote ...
Reg Edwards wrote:
But various facilities for selective culling have been available and
employed with ever-increasing efficiency for 58 years.


Hey, Reg, did you hear they've crossed a human and a rabbit
in China?


========================

Cec, no doubt stateside genetic engineers have already started work to catch
up with a similar cross with antenna feedline-gnawing squirrels plus an
additional selling point of a choice of burger-meat flavours. It is what is
known as killing two birds with one stone.
----
Reg, G4FGQ.



Dave Shrader August 15th 03 12:53 AM

The BIGGEST GUN!!! MIGHT makes RIGHT!!!

Hmmm... Not too religious for a clergyman to say grin

Maybe the world will finally develop a sense of moral behavior.

DD, W1MCE

Reg Edwards wrote:

This Earth, a tiny plot isolated in the vacuum of space, is already
overpopulated with people.

Its resources are being seriously depleted, polluted - food, clean air,
clean water, timber, oil.

But various facilities for selective culling have been available and
employed with ever-increasing efficiency for 58 years. Genetic Engineering
is being kept in reserve.

The question arises, who or what selects they who do the selecting ?




Dave Shrader August 15th 03 12:54 AM

A HABBIT!!

W5DXP wrote:

Reg Edwards wrote:

But various facilities for selective culling have been available and
employed with ever-increasing efficiency for 58 years.



Hey, Reg, did you hear they've crossed a human and a rabbit
in China?
--
73, Cecil, W5DXP



Roy Lewallen August 15th 03 01:36 AM

I hope it's not a bad habbit. If it is, I hope they've produced nun.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

Dave Shrader wrote:
A HABBIT!!

W5DXP wrote:

Reg Edwards wrote:

But various facilities for selective culling have been available and
employed with ever-increasing efficiency for 58 years.




Hey, Reg, did you hear they've crossed a human and a rabbit
in China?
--
73, Cecil, W5DXP





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