RI, MA EHS Pest Control Blog

RSS -- Grab EHS RSS Feed

Rodents Will Chew on Your Car's Wires

23 Mar 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

It's true: Rodents Will Chew on Your Car's Wires

Chew on this. Your warm car engine may also have a warm rodent nibbling on the wires.

"I had to replace some wiring due to rabbits chewing," a Times-Call reader said on Facebook.

"There is apparently an epidemic with squirrels and rabbits chewing electrical wiring and so forth under the hoods of cars," another called into the TC-Line on Jan. 4.

Not quite an epidemic, local mechanics say. But far from uncommon.

"It is a fact," said Scott Nichol of Hitek Professional Automobile Repair, who says he gets six or seven cases of rodent damage a year. "It is a cold, hard, nasty fact. Summertime, wintertime, fall, it doesn't matter. ... The more squirrels you have in an area, the more you see things like this."

Travis Paswaters of Hayes Automotive said he tends to see it a little more in the winter. Squirrels and mice aren't specifically looking for your wires, he said, they're looking for a place to nest -- and in the winter, a recently parked car that sits for a while provides a perfect home.

"We pull nests out of air boxes and intake valleys all the time," Paswaters said. "And if they get down and chew something you can't find, you can get a pretty nasty gremlin. One, I remember, chewed the ignition coil wires. The car would run rough because one of the cylinders wasn't firing."

And sometimes it can add up to more than just a rough ride. Last May, a car caught fire and burned; police later determined it was because of a squirrel nest in the engine.

"If they chew up the wiring, you can have a car-becue," Nichol said.

So what can a driver do?

First, keep the car in a garage if you can. You can't close off all the entryways a rodent would use -- they're openings that the car needs -- but putting the vehicle inside makes it less likely that squirrels will pay a visit. Mice may still be a risk, though, Nichol said, especially outside of town.

Second, open up the hood and check the engine regularly, Paswaters said. If you find twigs, bits of leaves or other nest-building material, you might just have a visitor. Having the oil changed regularly will help, too, he said, since the mechanic will be alert to signs of trouble.

One common home remedy is to use mothballs or paint the wires with Tabasco sauce to discourage chewing. That can work, Paswaters said, but it can also have unpleasant consequences, since the fresh air intake is near the core of the engine.

"It'll make the HVAC unpleasant," he said, referring to the passenger heating and cooling system. "You'll be getting that smell yourself."

Nichol advised not to try putting poison down near the car; the risk of a pet consuming it by mistake isn't worth it, he said. The best thing you can do, he said, is not to let the car sit.

"Don't keep it parked for weeks on end," he said. "Make sure the car moves."

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Mice Being Studied For Airport Security

25 Apr 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Mice Being Trained For Airport Security

The newest deterrent to would-be terrorists at airports might just be mice. An Israeli company, BioExplorers, has created a detector that looks like a full-body scanner, but actually contains three compartments containing eight mice, according to the Telegraph.

The mice will work four-hour shifts and are, according to researchers, more effective than dogs or x-ray machines, according to the Daily Mail. Air is pumped into the mice chamber every four hours so the animals can breathe.

When a mouse picks up a trace of something curious, they are trained to flee to a side chamber, which triggers an alarm (to prevent false positives, more than one mouse has to flee).

Mice take roughly ten days to learn their first smell and unlike dogs, they don't need interaction with trainers or constant attention.

The device was first tested on shoppers last year in Tel Aviv when mice picked out 22 people carrying mock explosives

Source = Huffington Post

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA

Pizza Shop Owner Plants Mice

04 Apr 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Cops State Pizza Shop Owner Accused of “Food Terrorism by Mice” for Sabotaging Rivals

Food Terrorism by Mice

A large pie with pepperoni, sausage…and rodents?

A Pennsylvania pizza shop owner is in jail after he allegedly dumped live vermin in his competitors' restaurants in a case cops are calling "food terrorism by mice."

Nikolas Galiatsatos, 47, who owns Nina's Bella Pizzeria in Upper Darby walked into Verona Pizza, a few blocks away from his shop on Monday afternoon carrying a bag and asking to use the restroom.

When Fanis Facas, the owner of Verona's, went to inspect the bathroom after hearing a banging noise, he discovered footprints on the toilet and a bag tucked into the ceiling. He turned the bag over to two officers that happened to be eating in the restaurant.

Cops suspected it was a possible drug deal, but instead of finding drugs in the bag, they found several mice, according to the Delaware County Daily Times.

Galiatsatos was then seen walking across the street to Uncle Nick's Pizza. Cops said after he left the second pizza parlor they found another bag containing five living mice and one dead mouse in a trash can.

He was promptly arrested and now faces charges of criminal mischief, disorderly conduct, harassment and cruelty to animals.

Police Superintendent Michael Chitwood said Nina's Bella Pizzeria had only been opened for a short time. It wasn't doing well, which may have motivated Galiatsatos to sabotage nearby pizza parlors.

"We believe that he's trying to put the competitive pizza places out of business," Chitwood said.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA

The Urban Bird Control Experts

02 Feb 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

As you can tell by the attached images that there is no job too big or too small for EHS. We love the unique challenges that urban bird control represents and we are up to the challenge! In the attached images we are humanely eliminating birds from a commercial building using two kinds of boom lifts.

The Urban Bird Control Experts The Urban Bird Control Experts
Click on Image to Enlarge

One lift gets us up three stories high while the other goes six stories high. Needless to say you have to be fond of heights to do this kind of work!

Bird Control MA, MA and RI pest control


Get e-mail updates on new blog posts!


Angie's List Super Service Award - 7 Time Winner
 
EHS proudly services all of Rhode Island and Massachusetts, including but not limited to Newton, Brookline, Cambridge, Wellesley, Boston, Milton, Sharon, Needham, Dedham, Watertown, Waltham, Wayland, Westwood, Canton, Stoughton, Walpole, Medfield, Mansfield, Carlisle, Weston, Sherbourne, Scituate, Cohasset, Easton, Somerville, Arlington, Dover, Franklin, Wrentham, Hopkinton, Framingham, Marlboro, Foxboro, and Norwood, MA plus Cumberland, Warwick, Cranston, Providence, East Providence, Scituate and Lincoln, RI.