
lrrowe wrote:These are the thoughts thatbran through my mind while watching this.
- Yes the food may have been protected, but what a mess it might have been afterwards.
- The paddle locks may have kept the lid on, but the latches which were ripped off which leaves a way for contaniments to seep in.....would you eat the food afterwards? So who really won?
Seems to me the best avoidance practice is not to leave the cooler out, no matter what brand it is. And I do worry about the bear trying to claw his way into a camper or vehicle once he smells the food stored.
booyah wrote:lrrowe wrote:These are the thoughts thatbran through my mind while watching this.
- Yes the food may have been protected, but what a mess it might have been afterwards.
- The paddle locks may have kept the lid on, but the latches which were ripped off which leaves a way for contaniments to seep in.....would you eat the food afterwards? So who really won?
Seems to me the best avoidance practice is not to leave the cooler out, no matter what brand it is. And I do worry about the bear trying to claw his way into a camper or vehicle once he smells the food stored.
So its really not about keeping your food safe from the bears, its about keeping the bears safe from your food. Bears who get a reward, associate humans with food. This leads to problem bears, which leads to dead bears.
Protect the bears, store your food safely!
aggie79 wrote:Here's another option a friend told me about: https://www.rticcoolers.com/shop/coolers/roto-molded/RTIC-45-White. The Rtic coolers appear to be as well made as Yeti, but half the cost.
RockinRobin2 wrote:aggie79 wrote:Here's another option a friend told me about: https://www.rticcoolers.com/shop/coolers/roto-molded/RTIC-45-White. The Rtic coolers appear to be as well made as Yeti, but half the cost.
Thanks Aggie79,
I will check this one out. Do you own one?
Robin
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