I have never owned a rover that didn't come with at least a nest, and sometimes with mice in residence. I believe they actually come from the factory, placed strategically in the heater duct, or, in the case of the pre S3, behing the instrument panel. Range Rover mice don't appear to be any more advanced, or sophisticated, though I did find a tiny pair of wellies. My Porsche mice seemed to have little tiny mustaches.
Mothballs!!! I liberally spread them around the engine compartment and interior when I put my series up for winter. This seems to alleviate the problem as I have not noticed any damage. I also do this in my boat over winter.
In the spring, I gather up the mothballs and baggy them for use next fall.
Either drive it more often or I have also heard about the dryer sheets.
If you have a specific hole that you know they use, steel wool is one of the only things that vermin like mice can't chew through.
As for the cat, I don't think it would work as I think we all know how the joke ends where a Jeep, Cruiser and Series Rover owner have an argument about whose vehicle is more airtight and to prove their point they all put a cat in their truck overnight.
1958 107 SW - Sold to a better home
1965 109 SW - nearly running well
1966 88 SW - running but needing attention
1969 109 P-UP
I concur with this one. Mice probably can build a nest overnight, but they don't stay long when you driver your rover regularly. Plus, regular driving makes your rover more reliable.
--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).
Been driving it every day lately, but I did notice that they had gone after the paper towels this morning when I got in.
It caught on fire today when I starter it up after work to drive home. That was fun!!!
So I guess I will try the drier sheets – or think about locking the cat inside the rover at night.
Mothballs!!! I liberally spread them around the engine compartment and interior when I put my series up for winter. This seems to alleviate the problem as I have not noticed any damage. I also do this in my boat over winter.
In the spring, I gather up the mothballs and baggy them for use next fall.
Works for me
Cheers John
have you ever smelled mothballs?
'64 Series IIA 88 Canvas Tilt
'68 Series IIA RHD Ambulance
'76 Spitfire 1500
'07 LR3 (Series Recovery Vehicle)
ROFLMAO! In all honesty, I have never found a better option than the basic mouse traps, with a wire bread tie around the paddle to make them set it off more frequently. Just check them often, and reset as necessary. Decon, and other poisions also work. Why reinvent the wheel?
Bad gas mileage gets you to some of the greatest places on earth.
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