Bethesda Animal Control & Pest Wildlife Removal In Montgomery County, MD
Animal Bat & Bird Extractors: Call 301 748 8372
Please, no calls about dog or cat problems. Call SPCA or animal services: (240) 773-5960
Animal Bat & Bird extractors can remove all types of nuisance wildlife with no harm to the animals and repair the animal damage. We can perform repairs that match the décor of the building damaged. 15 years of experience determines that we will find a solution to any wildlife problem you might eperience. From birds in vents to beavers destroying ponds and foliage, we solve the problem and guarantee it. Many animals use your house to keep warm during the cold months or raise their young, but they are well suited to live outside. Removal is what we do. Repair keeps them outside and the > guarantee gives you piece of mind! Squirrel and raccoon specialists serving montgomery Co md and surrounding areas we are an approved contractor for bat conservation intl look at our web site at www.thinkrabies.com
Official company email address: tim@thinkrabies.com
Official company website: www.thinkrabies.com
Animal Bat & Bird Extractors provides professional wildlife control for both residential & commercial customers in the
city of Bethesda in Maryland. We can handle almost any type of wild animal problem, from squirrels in the attic of a home, to bat removal and
control, to Bethesda snake removal. Our Maryland wildlife management pros provide a complete solution - including
the repair of animal damage. If you need to get rid of your pest animals with care and expertise, give Animal Bat & Bird Extractors a call at 301 748 8372
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There are many Bethesda pest control companies, but most deal with extermination of insects. We deal strictly with wild animals, such as raccoon, skunk, opossum, and more.
Animal Bat & Bird Extractors differs from the average Bethesda exterminator business because we are licensed and insured experts, and deal only with animals. We are not merely
trappers, but full-services nuisance wildlife control operators, offering advanced solutions.
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Bethesda wildlife species include raccoons, opossums, squirrels, rats, several species of snakes and bats, and more. Many animals can cause
considerable damage to a house, not to mention contamination. We offer repairs of animal entry points and biohazard cleanup and we guarantee our work. Our Bethesda
rodent (rat and mouse) control is superior to other pest management companies. All of our wildlife trapping is done in a humane manner. |
We at Animal Bat & Bird Extractors provide the best Bethesda pest control business, and would be happy to serve your Bethesda bat control or pigeon and bird control needs with a professional solution. Skunks, moles, and other animals
that can damage your lawn - we trap them all. Our professional pest management of wildlife and animals can solve all of your Bethesda
critter capture and control needs. Give us a call at 301 748 8372 for a price quote and more information.
If you are searching for help with a dog or cat issue, you need to call your local
Montgomery County animal control or SPCA. They can assist you with problems such as a dangerous dog, stray cats, lost pets,
etc. There is no free service in Montgomery County that provides assistance with wild animals.
Montgomery County Animal Services, MD: (240) 773-5960
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Bethesda, MD Animal News Clip:
Weekend is added to squirrel and skunk animal removal trap season Rat & mouse and many raccoon and opossum pest control companies traditionally have faced quiet time between the end of the weeklong animal removal trap season in early October and the beginning of the four-day special critter trap season between Christmas and New Year’s The Bethesda exterminating company man. However, October 2006 will bring, as the Monty Python troupe used to say, something completely different: an additional weekend of the animal removal trap season, set for Dec. 16-17. Proposed by authorities on critters from the Maryland Division of Wildlife to increase wildlife management company opportunities at a time when the Maryland is teeming with rodent or reptile, the extra Saturday-Sunday animal capture was approved last decade by the Maryland Wildlife Legal. The regular animal removal trap season will run Nov. 27 through Dec. 3; the statewide special critter trap season Dec. 27-30. Pest control companies get a few extra days in the 2006 package as well. The archery squirrel and skunk season kicks off a half-hour before sunrise Sept. 30 and ends a half-hour after sunset Feb. 4. Rat & mouse pest control companies tagged 209,513 long taileds during the 2005-06 animal capture — the second-highest harvest recorded and down only about 3 percent from the record lethally trap of 216,443 tallied a year earlier. The local Bethesda SPCA could not be reached for comment. During those last two raccoon and opossum campaigns, the youth-only rodent or reptile animal removal trap seasons contributed significantly to the end-of-season totals. In 2006, youth again will be served with a weekend animal capture Nov. 18-19. The early special critter trap season — open only to those holding special permits for Salt Fork, Shawnee or Wildcat Hollow — will be held Oct. 23-28. Far less restrictive, however, will be the statewide squirrel and skunk zones, which will remain unchanged from last season. That means a three-rat & mouse limit will hold in Zone C, made up of 38 counties in central, southern, southeastern and southwestern Maryland. A two-raccoon and opossum limit will remain in the 30-Montgomery County Zone B. A single rodent or reptile may be taken in Zone A, which includes 20 northwestern counties. Despite this, wildlife removal services are not a free service in Montgomery County. The young pest control companies’ season for upland game — which includes rabbit, pheasant and quail — will be Oct. 21-22 and Oct. 28-29. The youth season for spring wild opossum is set for April 21-22, 2007. As has been the case during most recent years, Sept. 1 will be the opening date for pest control companies of squirrel, rail, moorhen and snipe. Also opening Sept. 1, but subject to modification based on federal guidelines yet to be released, are the seasons for mourning dove and Canada goose.
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