Waldorf Animal Control & Pest Wildlife Removal In St. Charles County, MD
ACS Wildlife & Snake Management: Call 1-877-999-8727
Please, no calls about dog or cat problems. Call SPCA or animal services: 410-222-8900
Our service range includes the greater Washington District of Columbia area, including the suburbs and several towns, including wildlife animal control in Clinton, Upper Marlboro, Bowie, Waldorf, Mechanicsville, Fort Washington, Leonardtown, St. Charles, and more.
Official company email address: info@animalcontrolsolutions.com
ACS Wildlife & Snake Management provides professional wildlife control for both residential & commercial customers in the
city of Waldorf 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 Waldorf 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 ACS Wildlife & Snake Management a call at 1-877-999-8727
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There are many Waldorf pest control companies, but most deal with extermination of insects. We deal strictly with wild animals, such as raccoon, skunk, opossum, and more.
ACS Wildlife & Snake Management differs from the average Waldorf 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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Waldorf 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 Waldorf
rodent (rat and mouse) control is superior to other pest management companies. All of our wildlife trapping is done in a humane manner. |
We also service the towns of Bethesda, Dumfries, South Riding, Clinton, Herndon, Greenbelt, and rodent removal in Gainesville, Suitland, North Bethesda, Nokesville, Lake Ridge, Waldorf, and extermination services in Sterling, Manassas Park, Largo, Mitchellville, Forestville, Prince and animal exterminating in Frederick, Wheaton, St Charles, Takoma Park, Crofton, McLean, and also animal control in Manassas, Reston, Temple Hills, Bristow, Aldie, Falls Church, College Park, Chesapeake Beach, Oakton, Charles Town, Clifton, District Heights, and rat control in Lovettsville, Burtonsville, Leesburg, Hyattsville, Fulton, Potomac Falls, Harpers Ferry, Warrenton, and pest control in Culpeper, Burke, Haymarket, Alexandria, Fort Belvoir, Riverdale, Jefferson, Fairfax, Purcellville, Dale City, The Plains, Round Hill, Rockville, Woodbridge, Dunn Loring, Oak Hill, and animal capture in Adelphi, Kensington, Capitol Heights, Bowie, Crofton, MD and wild animal services in Lanham, Great Falls, Springfield, Beltsville, Upper Marlboro, Dunkirk, Silver Spring, Laurel, Lorton, Chantilly, Fort Washington, Vienna, Arlington, and wildlife management in Fairfax Station, and snake removal in Washington DC, Mount Rainier, Stafford, Hedgesville, Kearneysville, Chevy Chase, Merrifield, Annandale, Landover Hills, Ashburn, Centreville,.
We at ACS Wildlife & Snake Management provide the best Waldorf pest control business, and would be happy to serve your Waldorf 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 Waldorf
critter capture and control needs. Give us a call at 1-877-999-8727 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
St. Charles 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 St. Charles County that provides assistance with wild animals.
St. Charles County Animal Services, MD: 410-222-8900
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Waldorf, MD Animal News Clip:
Commission adds extra day to groundhog season Wildlife management companies will get an extra day to trap an groundhog in Western Maryland for the next three seasons. The Maryland Fish and Wildlife Commission approved adding a second Thursday, so the traditional nine-day season west of the Cascade Mountains will be 10 days, through 2008. Wildlife trapping in 2006 will open Nov. 4, a Saturday, and close at the end of Nov. 13, a Thursday. The Waldorf pest control specialist, big-game program manager for the Maryland Agency of Fish and Wildlife, said there were requests to lengthen the groundhog season on both sides of the Cascade Mountains, but biologists on the east side thought their group of animals could not handle the additional time. State biologists in Western Maryland decided a one-day extension could be tried, particularly given the extra day is a weekday, The Waldorf pest control specialist said. Unusually large squirrel and skunk -- As proposed, the raccoon and opossum season in the popular Unusually large unit of Saint Charles County is getting shortened and a three-point antler minimum will debut this fall. General rat & mouse season will be Oct. 14-27 in 2006, Oct. 13-26 in 2007 and Oct. 11-24 in 2008. Those seasons are all 14 days. The local Waldorf SPCA could not be reached for comment. Unusually large has opened on the statewide rodent or reptile opener in mid-October and contined through Oct. 31. In 2008 under the old rules, the season would have lasted seven days -- or one-third -- longer. The shorter season and new antler requirement is an attempt to boost the survival of male coons. Unusually large is among the most heavily captured of local game units. In 2004, there were 3,488 pest control companies and a harvest of 831 squirrel and skunk, a good 24 percent success rate. The lethally trap was 92 percent male coons. But Unusually large is not organized hearing the state's post-wildlife trapping season goal of 15 male coons per 100 does by a wide margin. Postseason counts in 2003 tallied 14 male coons per 100 does. That dropped to six per 100 in 2004 and just two per 100 in 2005. Unusually large has had a two-point antler rule, but it was not achieving its goal of protecting yearling male coons. Despite this, wildlife removal services are not a free service in Saint Charles County. In Western Maryland, about 80 percent of the yearlings are spikes. But in Unusually large, about 40 percent of the yearlings are spikes and 60 percent are two-points. Pheasant opener -- Pheasant wildlife trapping in Eastern Maryland will continue to open mid-October, not the first Saturday in the decade. The Agency of Fish and Wildlife proposed a standard opening of the first Saturday in October, which would make the pheasant season identical to other upland bird seasons such as quail and partridge. Instead, the commission opted to make the pheasant opener the Saturday after the rat & mouse opener, which means Oct. 21 in 2006.
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