An rv is a warm cozy place for a mouse to take up residence during the winter months.
Mice in rv underbelly.
Supposedly mice hate the smell.
The first thing you do.
What you can do.
The presence of the aluminum belly on your airstream helps chris but mice are sneaky and can work their way into an opening of perhaps inch diameter or smaller.
I set out dcon bait and a couple rat traps right on the flat area behind the windshield.
Mouse and rodent infestations often occur while your rv is in storage for the winter.
Fabric softener sheets spread dryer sheets all over the rv when it s in storage to keep mice away.
Every spring i open the engine dog house and inspect the area i usually find scraps from pinecones and nesting material tucked into engine cavities because it s warm there and.
Mice are hungry curious and small.
Then when you take it out put the sheets in a plastic bag and use them for laundry.
Mice have been getting into rvs ever since there have been rvs.
Commonly recommended deterrents include peppermint oil mothballs pine needle spray dryer sheets and oddly enough irish spring bar soap.
Any small hole in an rv can serve as an entrance for mice especially the underbelly the compartment where the shore power cord is kept and even the air conditioner.
You notice that rodents are using your rv s engine compartments as storage areas.
Accessing tiny places is their gig and they re very good at it.
It keeps them and other pests from entering through the small holes and cavities on the under side of your motorhome or.
Using various scents to keep mice at bay is usually the first thing rvers try to correct the problem.
Photo by dwight burdette while mice may not like these smells mice are extremely persistent.
If you re one of the campers who find evidence of little pests inside your rv you need to follow a good attack plan to get rid of them.
Irish spring soap same idea as the dry sheets.
Put these traits together and you have an underestimated rv enemy.
For several months of the year the camper is empty without much activity making it the perfect spot for rodents to hang out unnoticed.
Nearly all rv owners will get mice in their camper especially if it s stored and unused for long periods of time.
Look for even the tiniest strip of light seeping through.