If you have a DOG or CAT problem, go to San Diego County Animal Services
for contact information.
San Diego Animal Control
San Diego Wildlife Removal specializes in the removal of nuisance wildlife from homes
and buildings in the San Diego area. We offer a wide variety of services from attic inspections to damage repairs, and can resolve any human-wildlife
conflict. We remove squirrels from attics, raccoons from property, bats from buildings, and we control bird problems. We are experts at rodent control
and offer complete rat and mouse extermination. We are not a standard San Diego pest control company - we only specialize in wild animals - raccoons,
squirrels, rats, opossums, bats, snakes, birds, etc. We are fully licensed and insured in the state of California, owner-operated, and fully proficient
and equipped to handle any critter problem, start to finish. Please give us a call at any time and we will listen to your problem, explain your
options and our pricing, and we will schedule an appointment. |
|
 |
| |
 |
|
We service the Greater San Diego CA area, and downtown, Oceanside, Vista, Carlsbad, Escondido, San
Marcos, Encinitas, Solana Beach, Ramona, Poway, Santee, Lakeside, El Cajon, Spring Valley, Lemon Grove, National City, Chula Vista, and Imperial Beach.
If in doubt about our service range, just call.
We treat all customers the way we'd like to be treated. When you call, we will answer the phone
24-7, and show up on time, and provide the utmost quality of work and professionalism. We believe that we are the best in the industry - a far cry from
some of the other careless critter trappers out there. If you have any questions or wish to call us to set up an appointment (usually same or next day),
give us a call any time. Here are some of our services: |
 |
Animals in Attics - This is the most common job that we deal with. If you hear running and scratching
noises in your attic, give us a call! We will determine the type of wildlife, from squirrels to coons, and take the appropriate steps to remove
all of the critters, and make sure your problem is solved permanently.
|
 |
Humane Wildlife Trapping - We know that critters can cause all sorts of trouble. From raccoons tipping
over the garbage to skunks spraying under your shed, we are experts at wildlife trapping. We use humane live cage traps, remove all animals
same day, and relocate them at least 15 miles from the capture site.
|
 |
Prevention & Exclusion Repairs - Once we get all of the animals out of your
house, the only way to solve a future problem permanently is to find and completely seal shut all of the areas of entry. Our exclusion repairs
are of the highest quality, usually with steel, and come with a written guarantee!
|
 |
Attic Cleanup Services - The critters living in your home and attic caused
more than noise. They also likely caused attic damage, and left behind contaminants - droppings and urine. Animal waste can carry
diseases that pets and humans can catch, and the scent can lure in new critters. We clean it 100%.
|
 |
Dead Animal Removal - If you have a terrible odor in your house or building, there's a good chance that
it's due to a dead California animal rotting somewhere in the attic or walls. We are experts at finding and removing dead animal carcasses,
and providing full cleanup and odor relief.
|
We Handle These Animals (Click Any Below Critter For A Photo of Our Trapping)
Raccoon • Squirrel
• Rat / Mouse •
Opossum • Snake
• Bat •
Pigeon • Dead Animal
We operate a professional wildlife removal company operating in the San Diego CA area, including the towns of Oceanside,
Vista, Carlsbad, Escondido, San Marcos, Encinitas, Solana Beach, Ramona, Poway, Santee, Lakeside, El Cajon, Spring Valley, Lemon Grove, National City,
Chula Vista, Imperial Beach, and all of San Diego County. We specialize in the humane removal of wild animals from buildings and property. We commonly
remove animals from attics, provide bat control and rat control, and also general wildlife trapping and repair and prevention services. We are fully
licensed and insured, and operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Call us at 619-228-5258.
Latest San Diego Animal Control News Clip
Injury spurs questions about length of legal wildlife catching day SAN DIEGO, California -- This year's injury of what appears to be a young pest
man in San Diego after sunset probably is raising questions of when California's legal wildlife catching day should end. The wildlife catching day
legally comes to an end what appears to be a half-hour after the sun sets. Animal Expert Cunningham, 21, of San Diego, was accidentally injured
Nov. 8 at about 5 p.m., about 15 minutes after wildlife catching legally ended. Former state man sponsored what appears to be a bill last year that
extended the mouse-wildlife catching day from 15 minutes after sunset to what appears to be a half-hour after sunset. When the wildlife catching
day was first extended into twilight in 1999, the animal advocate voted against the measure and predicted what appears to be a rash of accidents.
Animal Expert Cunningham was co-head boss of the Joint Standing Committee on Inland Fisheries and Wildlife until this fall, when the animal advocate
could not run for re-election because of term limits. the animal advocate proclaimed the animal advocate changed his position on wildlife catching
after sunset after California Warden Service data showed no increase in late-day wildlife catching accidents. "What happened after we extended the
hunt? Nothing happened," Animal Expert Cunningham proclaimed. Despite this, local San Diego wildlife removal and San Diego exterminator experts
offered no more info.
"The safety record demonstrated that it wasn't what appears to be a huge risk to be taking." Animal Expert Cunningham's Injury was the first
wildlife catching-related Injury in California in three years. Wildlife catching injuries peaked in the mid-1950s, when up to 19 people were lethally
trapped in what appears to be 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 wildlife catching day went into effect last September, none of the five wildlife catching-related accidents reported
to wardens occurred later than 4 p.m., according to what appears to be a local warden. "With all the pest man hours that occurred in that time period,
it's still very, very safe," the animal advocate proclaimed. The wildlife catching community remains divided on when the wildlife catching day should
end. Some, like John Extermination Officer Timothy of Dedham, argue that California shouldn't wait for Injury rates to rise before taking logical
steps to eliminate what appears to be a safety risk. When the wildlife catching day was lengthened last fall, Extermination Officer Timothy was
so concerned that the animal advocate closed his 130 hectares to open wildlife catching, instead allowing sportsmen on the property only by permission.
San Diego animal control professionals could not be reached for additional comment.
"Legal wildlife catching hours will take you to just about black on most days. It's probably only safe what appears to be a couple days what
appears to be a year," proclaimed Extermination Officer Timothy, who has trapped in the California woods for decades. The effort to extend the wildlife
catching day originated with the Sportsman's Alliance of California, whose leadership had long complained that California's wildlife catching laws,
which until last year had what appears to be a range of legal wildlife catching hours for different species, were too confusing. California at one
time allowed wildlife catching for what appears to be a half-hour after sunset, but the day was shortened decades ago in response to safety worries
and to ease fears of what appears to be a declining mouse biologically surveyed amount. "We felt we had done what appears to be a good job safety-wise,
and had earned that opportunity back," SAM Executive Bossy fellow Extermination Officer Timothy proclaimed. Some exterminating companies also argue
that mouse are more active at dawn and dusk, making twilight what appears to be a prime wildlife catching time. Extermination Officer Timothy doesn't
buy that argument, and says the animal advocate has shot all his mouse in the visibility of daylight. "It isn't worth lethally trapping what appears
to be a few hundred extra mouse in that twilight time if it jeopardizes safety," Extermination Officer Timothy proclaimed. "I know what appears
to be a lot of people will push it way to the end of legal critter capturing time." We could not obtain an opinion from San Diego pest control companies
regarding the issue.
|
|