[pct-l] sleeping with your food
Stephen Adams
reddirt2 at earthlink.net
Mon Dec 7 18:36:25 CST 2009
Go ahead and try that up in the Mammoth or Tuolumne area and let me know how it works or how 100% odor proof your Opsac is.
On Dec 7, 2009, at 4:21 PM, Jim & Jane Moody wrote:
>
>
> 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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