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#16
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"I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in
a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart." Pics? |
#17
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"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
. .. Lime. The mafia (which does not really exist) swears by lime. |
#18
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How did the damned thing get in there? Here's an idea: Get thee to a fishing
tackle shop. Get a spool of the heaviest monofilament line they've got, and either a very heavy lure with large treble hooks, or have them help you rig treble hooks with an inline trolling sinker. Start fishing. "Alan" wrote in message ... Problem is the way the deck was constructed, I can't pop up any boards and get to him. Stupid design, but my only option is to either dismantle a huge section of deck or cut into it. Alan "Oscar_Lives" wrote in message news:Rj7re.44844$_o.32911@attbi_s71... "Alan" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan Pop a couple of decking boards up, reach down and pull that sucker out. Get him quick while he still has rigormortis. Once he bloats, you risk pulling a limb off or popping him open and releasing thousands of maggots. Good luck. |
#19
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Does it know where you live? Call around to some real hardware stores and
see if one of them has a snow rake. That's a shovel sort of an affair with VERY long aluminum snap-together poles. Rig up something with a snare, or some large fish hooks. Weren't you ever a girl scout??? |
#20
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I had something dead under my decking.
It must have been a possum. It stunk pretty bad. I happened to have several large quart bottles of Listerine. I dumped them were it seemed to smell worst and where the dogs thought it was. Smelled like a dentist's office for several days and then it went away. Doug Kanter wrote: Does it know where you live? Call around to some real hardware stores and see if one of them has a snow rake. That's a shovel sort of an affair with VERY long aluminum snap-together poles. Rig up something with a snare, or some large fish hooks. Weren't you ever a girl scout??? |
#21
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Sounds like opening up the deck is not an option.
Start with the lime and after that has had a day or two to work, dump some dirt or sand on the whole mess to bury it and then forget about it. Seal up any access so that it can't happen again. Option 2: get it real wet and go on vacation for 3 weeks. "Alan" wrote in message ... Problem is the way the deck was constructed, I can't pop up any boards and get to him. Stupid design, but my only option is to either dismantle a huge section of deck or cut into it. Alan "Oscar_Lives" wrote in message news:Rj7re.44844$_o.32911@attbi_s71... "Alan" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan Pop a couple of decking boards up, reach down and pull that sucker out. Get him quick while he still has rigormortis. Once he bloats, you risk pulling a limb off or popping him open and releasing thousands of maggots. Good luck. |
#22
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![]() "Art Todesco" wrote in message . .. I had something dead under my decking. It must have been a possum. It stunk pretty bad. I happened to have several large quart bottles of Listerine. I dumped them were it seemed to smell worst and where the dogs thought it was. Smelled like a dentist's office for several days and then it went away. yick. G You wouldn't really want to kill the bacteria if you intended to let it rot. Lovely topic..... |
#23
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![]() "Alan" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan I have a question. Did you poison the raccoon and it died in its home? I have a family of raccoons living under my deck, was thinking about poisoning, but worried they will die under the deck. Interesting dilemma. |
#24
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#25
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Years ago when we would go coon hunting and the coon went in a ground
hog hole and died we would take a length of barbed wire and bend a crank on the end. We wuld put the other end down the whole and crank the wire. The Barbs would wrap up in the fur and we could pull the coon out. That was when coons wew worth $5 and $5 was worth $5. It worked everytime. Mel & Donnie down in Bluebird Valley In the middle of beautiful down town Yountsville. Managers of the water works. |
#26
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I presume that the deck is at or near ground level.
Can you stick something stiff down between the boards and move it to a place where you can reach it? Piano wire is very stiff in the larger sizes. Even a piece of lattice or one of those driveway reflector posts. Now that I'v had my say, I am new to the group searching for an answer to my sod delema. I'll continue my search. Thanks. "Alan" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan |
#27
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![]() "Frank Rosenbaum" wrote in message ... I presume that the deck is at or near ground level. Can you stick something stiff down between the boards and move it to a place where you can reach it? Piano wire is very stiff in the larger sizes. Even a piece of lattice or one of those driveway reflector posts. Now that I'v had my say, I am new to the group searching for an answer to my sod delema. I'll continue my search. Thanks. "Alan" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan Taking up a couple of deck boards (especially if they are screwed down) is not difficult. |
#28
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"Alan" wrote in message
... Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan I have a tool that is handy for such tasks. I took the 10' fiberglass pole from a bicycle flag, removed the flag, and hose clamped a hook made of some brass rod (approx 1/8") to the end. Allows me to reach into lots of places. -- Rich Greenberg Marietta, GA, USA richgr atsign panix.com + 1 770 321 6507 Eastern time. N6LRT I speak for myself & my dogs only. VM'er since CP-67 Canines:Val, Red & Shasta (RIP),Red, husky Owner:Chinook-L Atlanta Siberian Husky Rescue. www.panix.com/~richgr/ Asst Owner:Sibernet-L |
#29
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Drive around town until you find a guy standing on the street asking for
money. Tell him to get in, you have a job for him to do. Get him to do it, then feed him lunch. "Frank Rosenbaum" wrote in message ... I presume that the deck is at or near ground level. Can you stick something stiff down between the boards and move it to a place where you can reach it? Piano wire is very stiff in the larger sizes. Even a piece of lattice or one of those driveway reflector posts. Now that I'v had my say, I am new to the group searching for an answer to my sod delema. I'll continue my search. Thanks. "Alan" wrote in message ... Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan |
#30
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On Tue, 11 Oct 2005 10:50:42 -0400, "Frank Rosenbaum"
wrote: Hi, Hope someone can help. I have a dead raccoon trapped under my deck. Problem is that it is in a location I can't reach unless I tear the deck apart. I have no problem letting it decompose naturally but the stench is bad and I am worried about disease. Personally I don't think it will cause disease. Depressing topic but someone on the news pointed out that the dead bodies from Katrina wouldn't cause disease even if they weren't buried quickly. It is people or animals who die from communicable diseases that are a health risk. Of course maybe you don't know what killed the raccoon. But soon the bugs and flies will find it and eat it. When they are done, they'll leave. What part of the country are you in and how long has it been there? I can see it through the cracks in the deck and can pour liquid or powder (maybe) on the carcass. The traditional substance is lime. a powder, white, I think. It's used iirc when people are afraid of contagion and there are too many bodies to bury them right away. Maybe I'm thinking of cases when cattle die. It speeds decomposition iiuc. I think you can buy it at garden stores, where it is sold to change the pH of soil iirc. Sure, don't people spread it on lawns for that reason? Any suggestions as to what I can do would be greatly appreciated as I am trying to avoid tearing apart the deck. Thanks. Alan Remove NOPSAM to email me. Please let me know if you have posted also. |
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