[pct-l] sleeping with your food

Jim & Jane Moody moodyjj at comcast.net
Mon Dec 7 18:21:13 CST 2009



I haven't tried it, but I've thought about something similar.  Rubbing a Purell wipe around the food bag, trash ziplock, etc. might eliminate, reduce, or override any attractive food smells.  Has anybody tried this in the field? 

Mango 




----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Rick Donahue" <anutherrick at gmail.com> 
To: pct-l at backcountry.net 
Sent: Monday, December 7, 2009 6:19:05 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [pct-l] sleeping with your food 

The smell approach matches my own experience at home. We live in the Sierra 
Foothills and have a real problem with 
bears that like trash. Trash pickup is at 6 am. Many put their trash out the 
night before. You can usually tell who has 
not been careful in disposing of food waste in the trash can because it's 
spread all over the street in the morning. The 
only solution I've found is to put 2-3 tablespoons of bleach or ammonia 
inside the top of our 96 gallon trash can. I've 
been putting the trash out the night before now for 5-6 months and have not 
had a single problem... yet. 

--Rick 

 >Date: Mon, 7 Dec 2009 11:59:09 -0800 (PST) 
 >From: Jereen Anderson <jereenanderson at yahoo.com> 
 >Subject: [pct-l] Sleeping with your food 
 >To: pct-l at backcountry.net 
 >Cc: reddirt2 at gmail.com 
 >Message-ID: <363559.93010.qm at web58604.mail.re3.yahoo.com> 
 >Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 
 > 
 >As stated, I never sleep with my food. Years ago I used to hang it high in 
trees. This did not always work. Clever bears still  >sometimes managed to 
get it. Besides, in the high country of the Sierra the trees simply were not 
tall enough. Sometime in the  >seventies the bears would start coming up to 
the higher elevations - because they knew that we backpackers had food. I 
had  >some success puting it in waterproof bags, weighing it down with 
rocks, and, using a light rope, tossing it into a lake under a few  >feet of 
water. 
 >Then, about 20 years ago, I discovered "bear charms" - cotton tobacco 
sacks with 2 or 3 mothballs in each. On my PCT thru-ride  >I carried about 
20 of these in an OPSAK. In the evening I surrounded my saddle and pack bags 
with them and also my tent. I  >stored my food in a large OPSAK and put it 
next to the saddle bags. I would like to point out that the OPSAK is 100% 
odor proof  >and that the URSACK is not. Bears and rodents cannot smell your 
food if it is stored in an OPSAK !? The mothballs function as  >an effective 
bear repellant - they really dislike the smell. If there are any lingering 
food smells around your canp - or on you - the  >mothballs are a second line 
of defence. I also want to point out that, while I have found that bears 
dislike the mothball smell,  >rodents are not discouraged by it. 
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