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#1
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Took the canopy cover off in the hanger and there it was. A pile of chewed
paper on the seat. Flaming mice have got in again. We now have to derig it and use a borescope to find if they have left anything in inaccesable places. When it last happened a few years ago on another glider we found one wing rattled. Eventually we removed about 12lb of hazle nuts from the wing! Be careful this time of year. The little blighters are stocking up for the winter and a glider wing will make an ideal home nigel |
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"Eventually we removed about 12lb of hazle nuts from the wing!"
Imagine how you would feel if some marauding giant suddenly turned up at your home, chucked all the food out, and changed the locks! |
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Derrick Steed wrote:
"Eventually we removed about 12lb of hazle nuts from the wing!" Imagine how you would feel if some marauding giant suddenly turned up at your home, chucked all the food out, and changed the locks! Hey, if he wants to help out with the insurance and the annual, we can talk! :-) Tony V. |
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On 09 Nov 2004 18:22:47 GMT, OscarCVox wrote:
Took the canopy cover off in the hanger and there it was. A pile of chewed paper on the seat. Flaming mice have got in again. We now have to derig it and use a borescope to find if they have left anything in inaccesable places. When it last happened a few years ago on another glider we found one wing rattled. Eventually we removed about 12lb of hazle nuts from the wing! Be careful this time of year. The little blighters are stocking up for the winter and a glider wing will make an ideal home nigel Sounds like you need a good hangar cat ! Seems to have fixed that problem for us. Cheers, John G. |
#5
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Many years ago an Ercoupe lost a wing in flight because the mice had
urinated on the spar enough to corrode it. I had to remove the cover of my Ercoupe wing because mice had made a nest inside - and it was in a hangar. So, maybe when the last words on the cockpit recorder on the crashed Boeing are "Nuts", we should suspect mice and squirrels? Colin N12HS --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.783 / Virus Database: 529 - Release Date: 10/25/04 |
#6
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Not just rodents. Many years ago in a 1-26 contest in the U.S., one
poor pilot flew several days barely able to tolerate the smell from a dead bird somewhere in one wing. I'm not sure how he removed it but I seem to recall that part of the solution (no pun intended) was to partially fill the wing with water from the root rib, slosh it around, then stand the wing up on the tip of the spar and pour it out. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB"e |
#7
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In article , Chip
Bearden writes Not just rodents. Many years ago in a 1-26 contest in the U.S., one poor pilot flew several days barely able to tolerate the smell from a dead bird somewhere in one wing. I'm not sure how he removed it but I seem to recall that part of the solution (no pun intended) was to partially fill the wing with water from the root rib, slosh it around, then stand the wing up on the tip of the spar and pour it out. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB"e I heard a story about someone who felt a tickling sensation on his right knee at the top of a thermal. Looking down, he saw a mouse sitting on his knee. -- Mike Lindsay |
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We had a pilot at Soar Truckee who was flying a Diamant on a 500K out and
return badge flight. After takeoff he felt something crawling up his pant leg. After he got up well into oxygen altitudes, the crawling up his leg subsided, but continued again each time he got lower. Needless to say, he tried to stay as high as he could! He was able to complete the flight, but at the end of the landing rollout he jumped from the cockpit and pulled down his pants. A chipmunk ran off into the bushes. He deserved the badge... -Bob Korves "Mike Lindsay" wrote in message news ![]() In article , Chip Bearden writes Not just rodents. Many years ago in a 1-26 contest in the U.S., one poor pilot flew several days barely able to tolerate the smell from a dead bird somewhere in one wing. I'm not sure how he removed it but I seem to recall that part of the solution (no pun intended) was to partially fill the wing with water from the root rib, slosh it around, then stand the wing up on the tip of the spar and pour it out. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB"e I heard a story about someone who felt a tickling sensation on his right knee at the top of a thermal. Looking down, he saw a mouse sitting on his knee. -- Mike Lindsay |
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I googled a bit for the snake tales previously posted to RAS, but it also
brings up a lot of other topics. We tend to skin and cook the rattlesnakes at owl canyon Hypoxic chippies, hah! Unfortunately, chippies above 5000msl are often carriers of plague. Wonder if the altitude affects the fleas. Frank Whiteley "Bob Korves" bkorves@winfirstDECIMALcom wrote in message ... We had a pilot at Soar Truckee who was flying a Diamant on a 500K out and return badge flight. After takeoff he felt something crawling up his pant leg. After he got up well into oxygen altitudes, the crawling up his leg subsided, but continued again each time he got lower. Needless to say, he tried to stay as high as he could! He was able to complete the flight, but at the end of the landing rollout he jumped from the cockpit and pulled down his pants. A chipmunk ran off into the bushes. He deserved the badge... -Bob Korves "Mike Lindsay" wrote in message news ![]() In article , Chip Bearden writes Not just rodents. Many years ago in a 1-26 contest in the U.S., one poor pilot flew several days barely able to tolerate the smell from a dead bird somewhere in one wing. I'm not sure how he removed it but I seem to recall that part of the solution (no pun intended) was to partially fill the wing with water from the root rib, slosh it around, then stand the wing up on the tip of the spar and pour it out. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB"e I heard a story about someone who felt a tickling sensation on his right knee at the top of a thermal. Looking down, he saw a mouse sitting on his knee. -- Mike Lindsay |
#10
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Bob Korves writes
Needless to say, he tried to stay as high as he could! He was able to complete the flight, but at the end of the landing rollout he jumped from the cockpit and pulled down his pants. A chipmunk ran off into the bushes. He deserved the badge... -Bob Korves Presumably, so did the chipmunk? Though I'd guess his claim would be disqualified for not using oxygen... -- Bill Gribble /---------------------------------------\ | http://www.ingenuitytest.co.uk | | http://www.cotswoldgliding.co.uk | | http://www.scapegoatsanon.demon.co.uk | \---------------------------------------/ |
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