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Clayton Animal Control & Pest Wildlife Removal
In Rabun County, GA

Animal Solutions Inc.:
Contact - (770) 823-7154

Please, no calls about dog or cat problems. Call SPCA or animal services: (706) 867-7297

  Animal Solutions Inc. provides wildlife trapping, removal and control of nuisance pest animals in Georgia. Professional wildlife trapping and animal removal provided in Habersham, Hall, White, Jackson, Banks, Clark, Lumpkin, Stephens, Madison, Rabun, Hart, and Franklin County. Squirrels, bats, skunks, pigeons, beaver, raccoons, birds, and opossums trapped, removed and excluded. Dead animal removal also provided. Animal Solutions Inc. trapping & wildlife control in Cornelia, Toccoa, Gainesville, Athens, Clayton, Dahlonega, Commerce, Jefferson, Clarksville, Cleveland, Helen, and Hartwell, provides professional wildlife removal, prevention, and exclusion from Georgia homes and businesses in these cities.

Owner and operator Corey Sprinkle graduated from the University of Georgia with a Bachelor of Science degree in forest resources, majoring in wildlife biology. My focus was on wildlife damage control. I have been in the nuisance wildlife control profession since 1994 and have owned and operated my own wildlife removal company since 1995. I am also a member of the National Wildlife Control Operators Association (NWCOA) which embodies ethics and professionalism in the industry. I am extremely effective and efficient at solving nuisance wildlife control problems.

Animal Solutions Inc. is fully insured with $1,000,000 in general liability insurance and also carries workers compensation. All employees are licensed by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Warranties are provided on structures and exclusion work. We appreciate our customers.

  Official company email address: animalsolutions@aol.com
   


Animal Solutions Inc. provides professional wildlife control for both residential & commercial customers in the city of Clayton in Georgia. We can handle almost any type of wild animal problem, from squirrels in the attic of a home, to bat removal and control, to Clayton snake removal. Our Georgia 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 Solutions Inc. a call at (770) 823-7154
There are many Clayton pest control companies, but most deal with extermination of insects. We deal strictly with wild animals, such as raccoon, skunk, opossum, and more. Animal Solutions Inc. differs from the average Clayton 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.
Clayton 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 Clayton rodent (rat and mouse) control is superior to other pest management companies. All of our wildlife trapping is done in a humane manner.
Animal Solutions Inc. trapping & wildlife control in Cornelia, Toccoa, Gainesville, Athens, Clayton, Dahlonega, Commerce, Jefferson, Clarksville, Cleveland, Helen, and Hartwell, provides professional wildlife removal, prevention, and exclusion from Georgia homes and businesses in these cities.
 
We at Animal Solutions Inc. provide the best Clayton pest control business, and would be happy to serve your Clayton 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 Clayton critter capture and control needs. Give us a call at (770) 823-7154 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 Rabun 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 Rabun County that provides assistance with wild animals.

Rabun County Animal Services, GA: (706) 867-7297


Clayton, GA Animal News Clip:
Death spurs questions about length of legal critter stalking day

CLAYTON, Georgia -- This year's death of what is possibly a young wildlife management company in Clayton after sunset likely is raising questions of when Georgia's legal critter stalking day should end. The critter stalking day legally comes to an end what is possibly a half-hour after the sun sets. Creature Specialist , 21, of Clayton, was accidentally shot to death Nov. 8 at about 5 p.m., about 15 minutes after critter stalking legally ended. Former state man sponsored what is possibly a bill last year that extended the coyote-critter stalking day from 15 minutes after sunset to what is possibly a half-hour after sunset. When the critter stalking day was first extended into twilight in 1999, the humane society manager voted against the measure and predicted what is possibly a rash of accidents. Creature Specialist was co-head boss of the Joint Standing Committee on Inland Fisheries and Wildlife until this fall, when the humane society manager could not run for re-election because of term limits. the humane society manager remarked the humane society manager changed his position on critter stalking after sunset after Georgia Warden Service data showed no increase in late-day critter stalking accidents. "What happened after we extended the hunt? Nothing happened," Creature Specialist remarked. Clayton exterminator and Clayton wildlife removal professionals declined comment on the matter.

"The safety record demonstrated that it wasn't what is possibly a huge risk to be taking." Creature Specialist 's death was the first critter stalking-related fatality in Georgia in three years. Critter stalking deaths peaked in the mid-1950s, when up to 19 people were lethally trapped in what is possibly a single season. But since the advent of fluorescent-orange clothing in the 1970s, rates have plummeted for all times of day. After the extended critter stalking day went into effect last September, none of the five critter stalking-related accidents reported to wardens occurred later than 4 p.m., according to what is possibly a local warden. "With all the wildlife management company hours that occurred in that time period, it's still very, very safe," the humane society manager remarked. The critter stalking community remains divided on when the critter stalking day should end. Some, like John Raccoon Specialist Arnold of Dedham, argue that Georgia shouldn't wait for fatality rates to rise before taking logical steps to eliminate what is possibly a safety risk. When the critter stalking day was lengthened last fall, Raccoon Specialist Arnold was so concerned that the humane society manager closed his 130 hectares to open critter stalking, instead allowing sportsmen on the property only by permission. We attempted to get more information from Clayton animal control experts, but could not.

"Legal critter stalking hours will take you to just about black on most days. It's probably only safe what is possibly a couple days what is possibly a year," remarked Raccoon Specialist Arnold, who has trapped in the Georgia woods for decades. The effort to extend the critter stalking day originated with the Sportsman's Alliance of Georgia, whose leadership had long complained that Georgia's critter stalking laws, which until last year had what is possibly a range of legal critter stalking hours for different species, were too confusing. Georgia at one time allowed critter stalking for what is possibly a half-hour after sunset, but the day was shortened decades ago in response to safety worries and to ease fears of what is possibly a declining coyote biologically surveyed amount. "We felt we had done what is possibly a good job safety-wise, and had earned that opportunity back," SAM Executive Bossy fellow Raccoon Specialist Arnold remarked. Some exterminators also argue that coyote are more active at dawn and dusk, making twilight what is possibly a prime critter stalking time. Raccoon Specialist Arnold doesn't buy that argument, and says the humane society manager has shot all his coyote in the visibility of daylight. "It isn't worth lethally trapping what is possibly a few hundred extra coyote in that twilight time if it jeopardizes safety," Raccoon Specialist Arnold remarked. "I know what is possibly a lot of people will push it way to the end of legal critter capturing time." This report is not verified by Clayton pest control companies.

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