โJun-29-2014 04:08 PM
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โJul-06-2014 07:30 AM
Powder pig wrote:
Yes, porcupines can totally disable your vehicle by chewing on tires, brake lines, radiator hoses, or wiring. They seem to go for rubber or areas with winter road salt left on them.
They seem to be more of a problem in the wetter West Kootenays like Valhalla and Kokanee parks but are also a problem in St. Mary alpine park and Bugaboo park.
Some parks have rolls of wire left by other users but I carry my own chicken wire to be safe. Plasticized wire would be fine but they could chew through plastic fencing. The procedure is to wrap the wire entirely around the vehicle. Put rocks on the wire at ground level so they can't get under the wire and then prop sticks against the top of the wire and tie it to mirrors, grill, etc., so they can't climb over the top and in.
There seem to be fewer porcupines around in our area of the East Kootenays but I wouldn't take a chance if leaving a vehicle overnight. I don't bother with the wire if only parked for a day hike.
โJul-05-2014 09:19 PM
โJul-01-2014 06:17 AM
profdant139 wrote:
Powder Pig, do the porkies bother the vehicles in campgrounds at night? How would the animal know if you are out backpacking or asleep in the trailer nearby? (On second thought, they could probably hear me snoring. That'll scare them away for sure!)
โJun-30-2014 08:49 PM
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โJun-30-2014 08:35 AM
paulj wrote:You are probably referring to Black Canyon NP on the Gunnison River.
I have had 2 porcupine encounters. One was in Gunnison Nat Park, Colorado. I heard something under my truck camper, and chased it around the campground a bit by flashlight.
โJun-30-2014 08:27 AM