Battson wrote:Oregon180 wrote:My plane seems to attract bees. Might be the bright yellow.
That's funny, I have the same thing. Insects of all sorts love to be on the plane...
So who here regularly leaves their plane tied down and walks away, in the middle of nowhere?
Part of the joy of going to a backcountry strip is being able to explore the area, take pictures, do some fishing, and in general, take in what the wilderness has to offer. I can't imagine being stuck on the strip to watch the plane all the time. I do worry, but I have not found a viable alternative to the risk involved. I am always armed and just hope that I can catch the evil doer in the act. That's not likely, but I don't know what else to do. Locks won't work and only invite damage. Animals are going to do what they want and all one can do is to remove the incentive to enter the plane (food). A pet rattlesnake sitting on the pilot seat might be a good deterrent. I wonder if a fake one would do the trick. If it looked like it was sleeping, I doubt that anyone would want to wake it to find out if it was real. Just a thought. However, that sure wouldn't work in Alaska - no snakes. There, one would need a grizzly bear in the seat. Wait, how about a pet skunk? No, the lack of scent might be a dead giveaway. Perhaps just put a Malamute in the pilot seat.
cbfraser wrote:Heading to grizzly and possible polar bear country - I see a few references to electric fences.
Does anyone have experience with this portable kit? I'm a bit skeptical that it would deter a polar bear.
Or better to buy electric fence material, carry a small generator to drive a full line energizer.
Should be in lodges most of the time but would like a safe option for camping out.
http://www.udap.com/bearshock.htm
Good video here of Nols research on fences & bears - pretty convincing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sv2G-aRDvyY&feature=relmfu
Some their research here. http://rendezvous.nols.edu//content/category/46/263/739/
A detailed test report here with recommended vendors http://rendezvous.nols.edu/files/Curriculum/research_projects/Risk%20Management%20Reports/MTDCfoodfence.pdf

TomD wrote:Battson;
I would think the Keas would be a scourge in NZ. I had some try to eat the rubber off the windshield wipers on our van and they totally destroyed a bicycle seat.
TD
courierguy wrote: I have had some close calls with other aircraft flying by, when I've been parked on top a mountain. The wrong kind of pilot (meaning one not even aware of all this off airport foolishness we indulge in) could raise all kinds of unwanted hell, thinking he was helping out. I go so far as to hide the airplane if possible if there a while, at least try and get off a bare ridge top and get under some trees if possible. I've even thought of hand signals to give if circled by another airplane "rescuing" me. After much thought, the only one I could come up with would be the one finger salute, seriously, that'd piss another pilot off enough to where he's probably just say to hell with you, and fly off. Anyone else think of another way to signal "all is OK, nothing to look at here, go away, thanks anyway?"
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