I have heard on this forum of using the cheapest, smelliest (dollar store?) dryer sheets you can find and stick them in the spaces under drawers, in cabinets, and near any outside access holes to repel mice. I can't swear that this works - I picked up a couple of "travelling" mice in forest area stays over the years, and had to resort to traps inside to get them taken care of. But I never had any invade while the trailer was in storage - but that might also be an environmental issue (feral cats?).
Dryer sheets, moth balls, peppermint oil, all work as long as there are no mice to begin with! There have been countless posts how people have found dryer sheets being used to build nests by mice. Seal up all the holes, set traps. Cats and poison also work but aren't always the best solution....DonYears ago, when first on this forum, I read and tried the dryer sheet idea. Mice literally used them for toilet paper.
we might not stop them, but we sure do want to make them have to work harder to get in don't we?I also filled and covered every opening I could find, even made rubber flaps for the hydraulic rods. But they still got in. I'll stick with the MouseFree because it works.
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good info, thanksFor holding the foam in the larger holes, I taped a piece of window screen over it and then sprayed the foam over it. Worked pretty good. To close out the gap between the front wall and the frame in the front compartment, I folded screen into a channel, stuffed it in place and filled it with foam.
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If you clean the tip and nozzle with acetone when you're done, you might get a second time from it.