The others are just major annoyances but can drive you mad if you let them.Other hazards that are real are lightning and falls involving broken bones and lacerations and punctures and of course in season the evr present hypothermia if not prepared.Other then these any other threats are almost non existent.
Also, funny story, I was once approached by a raccoon during the day. I turned around and took off, thinking rabies, but upon reflection the animal looked healthy and it was probably food habituated from a local neighborhood or something. In retrospect I felt like I overreacted but better safe than sorry, as they say...
Something similar but not in the pines. My oldest son set out for the bus stop and made it out as far as the front porch and was confronted by a raccoon. He fled back in his moms house but left his book bag outside. He watched the raccoon open it up and walk off with his lunch.I was laughing as I read this because I had the exact same thing happen to me while I was hiking on the Batona Trail. It was about 11am and I saw what looked like a Siamese cat approaching me from about an eighth of a mile up the trail. I thought, "Somebody must have dumped a cat out here." But as it got closer, I could see it was a raccoon, and it was heading straight for me at a brisk pace. I immediately started to panic because I thought for sure this had to be a rabid raccoon. A raccoon shouldn't be out roaming around at 11am, and it surely shouldn't come running up to a human being. I quickly grabbed a stick to act as a buffer between me and the raccoon. I shook the stick in front of me and shouted, "Get out of here!" The raccoon came to within ten feet of me, stared at me for a few seconds, then climbed up a tree and sat on a branch. It was then that I realized that this wasn't a rabid raccoon, it was likely a raccoon that had been repeatedly fed by people at a campground or some other place, had become a nuisance and a danger, so it was trapped and released in a remote area.
I have seen them made of pine needles and they did not look good.I personally made mine out of oak leaves.Pine needles would be a pain for sure and not a good insulation.Not to take this thread off-topic, but just a comment on the debris hut; I always imagined that it was challenging to build a debris hut in the pine barrens. We're used to building them in the deciduous forests up here (my 7 year old and I built one in 30 minutes a few weeks ago) but up here in the beech/oak/tulip/hickory forests we're loaded with leaves for insulating material. We have to hunt around for good lodgepoles and there's always the challenge of finding the notch for the lodgepole but once we've got those two things down we're good to go. I know that there are lots of scrub oaks and the occasional chestnut or black/red oak down there, but overall do you find it more of a pain to build them in the pines?
I have seen them made of pine needles and they did not look good.I personally made mine out of oak leaves.Pine needles would be a pain for sure and not a good insulation.
take a rake.makes it a lot easierI've read in the past about people using whole pine boughs and large pieces of bark sandwiched between them, but I'm with you, I can't imagine that it would be as good as leaves just because of how little air seems to be trapped by them. I'm planning on trying it in the barrens sometime with a mix of materials.
I agree they are a danger to pets but I think folks are going overboard if their losing sleep at night worrying about being attacked by coyotes. Wanna see something much more dangerous then a coyote? Look in the mirror.The coyotes know it too.