We used to use flea & tick collars around an ankle until the Army banned
it because too many idiots were too stupid to understand you had to put
it around the OUTSIDE of your boot, not on the inside.

There was also a tick repellent packet you could carry in an outside
cargo pocket. Taken off the market again because stupid people didn't
use it according to the instructions, and had a reaction.

On 6/20/2016 12:25 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
Get a good tick repellent, (they're hard to find most don't work worth
crap), and put it on you cloths, use it in conjunction with the mosquito
repellent.

On 6/8/2016 1:17 AM, ann sanfedele wrote:
Also... maybe stop eating Bananas for a couple of weeks before you
go... although the Mosquitos shouldn't be as annoying in sept as
earlier they

are nasty little guys


ann

On 6/7/2016 10:13 PM, Stanley Halpin wrote:
In early September we will be in Alaska, have a one-day tour where
the two of us (and maybe 2 others) will be flown to an area to be
determined where bears have been recently spotted according to the
best information the pilot has acquired. The information sheet
includes the following list of items that we should not bring:

    • Seafood in your lunches
    • Backpacks or clothing from previous days fishing, unless
thoroughly washed
    • Glass containers
    • Aerosol sprays
    • Bear spray or Pepper spray (unsafe on the aircraft)
    • Firearms (not allowed on the aircraft)

They don’t mention after-shave.

stan

On Jun 7, 2016, at 6:10 PM, Bob W-PDML <[email protected]> wrote:

So not a good idea to wear salmon-scented after-shave?

On 7 Jun 2016, at 19:20, Daniel J. Matyola <[email protected]>
wrote:

On Tue, Jun 7, 2016 at 1:16 PM, Christine Aguila
<[email protected]> wrote:
Seeing a wild bear sounds cool and scary at the same time
It's NOT seeing a wild bear that is dangerous.  If you see the bear
before it sees you, and you stay out of its way and awy from any cubs,
they seldom bother you.  If, however, you unexpectedly come into close
proximity to a bear in the woods, or inadvertently approach a cub,
things can get very dicey indeed.  I got rather close to a number of
them in Alaska, but I kept my distance and they were more interested
in the salmon than me, so there was never any real danger. The sight
-- or the smell -- can increase one's pulse rate a bit in any event.


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