Other Examples

(ABOVE) These two rats were trapped after they tunneled under the foundation of a residential home and chewed threw the wood under the sink to get access to the home. The home was later excluded with wire under the ground around the foundation and all holes were sealed to stop and further problems in the future.

 

(ABOVE) This small yearling Grey Fox was live trapped and re-located after he made a habit of digging up the mulch and yard of a residential home looking for moles and voles.

 

(ABOVE) These two sets of young raccoons were live trapped after they made a habit of eating the cat food off the porch of a residential home, they had a path worn down on the hill in front of the home from traveling to and from the house.

 

(ABOVE) A few raccoons that were live trapped removed from a residential home.

 

(ABOVE) Here are three baby raccoons that were removed along with their mother from an attic and re-located.

 

The ABOVE three pictures show some of the damage raccoons can due to a attic, in the insulation on the first picture you can see were the raccoons really worked it over. The next two pictures shows the raccoon dropping left in just a short time, notice the piles of bird droppings as well. The chimney gave these critters direct access to the attic and made a nice roosting site for the pigeons and a home to five raccoons.

 

(ABOVE) the finished look of a reworked chimney. Repairs were a new crown and three new chimney caps, along with a complete home seal up and exclusion.

 

(ABOVE)This chimney had lost several bricks just inside the attic, the chimney was not capped of above the roof line. This gave the raccoons and birds direct access to warm place to roost and sleep.

 

(ABOVE) Moles had taken over the yard of a residential home, the technician is placing mole traps in the main tunnels around the foundation of the home. Some 35 moles were trapped out of this yard.