Hoosac_Love

Hoosac_Love t1_jcfw5v2 wrote

Rodents could be anywhere in the world that has a food source attracting them and a method for rodent entrance in your dwelling.

I don't get any but I'm on the second floor and non of my pipes allow entrance but I have seen dead mice in the parking lot.

Trailors are actually the worst for rodents and insects for sure ,stay away from mobile homes if you don't want vistors

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Hoosac_Love OP t1_jcerzh8 wrote

These people obviously weren't not experienced enough in wilderness sports to be hiking or snow shoeing in a blizzard nor'easter because they called police looking for rescue.

If one really feels they are so advanced in wilderness skills to go out in remote mountainous areas in a blizzard,I'm not stopping you but most people who do this stuff don't know what they are doing.

That is why were warning the general public because most people are not so advanced.

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Hoosac_Love OP t1_jcbdmsw wrote

I don't want to be insensitive but this is dumb,hiking Mt Washington state forest in a bad bad snow storm (not to be confused with the mountain in New Hampshire)

Mt Washington is a town of 150 odd people on the Connecticut and New York borders in southwest MA.It is very mountainous and remote and is known for Bash Bish falls the states largest waterfall and Mt Everett and large Mt of about 24,25 hundred feet.It is also known for a decent rattlesnake population.

Every year someone gets lost in the White Mountains or on Mt Greylock in a storm and occassionally someone dies or goes missing or a body pops up years later in the Maine wilderness or something.

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If these people were not able to find a cell signal they would have surely died and I am surprised they found a cell signal in Mt Washington in a blizzard.What possessed them to hike to a remote cabin on a MT in a blizzard.And the State Troopers they put at risk too ,what about them.

Please don't hike in storms,really it's not smart

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