Minnesota Wild Animal and Pest Control
March 27, 2012
Wild Life Management and Pest Control MN | Remove Gophers, Skunks Bats, Pests
Wild animal and pest control is important no matter what the season. While some do hibernate during the winter, others actively work on building warm nests year round, often inside homes. With 24% of homeowners reporting mice infestations specifically in the winter, they are among the top pest issues of the season. Read the rest of this entry »
Green Pest Control in Minnesota
August 28, 2009
Gophers: Pest Control in Your Yard, Part III
I’ve tried everything, but I can’t get rid of the gophers in my yard. Can you help?
The experts in humane pest removal at Minnesota Wild Animal Management, Inc. most certainly can help you. We will come out to your home to determine what type of pest you have (voles, moles, gophers, pocket gophers, striped gophers or chipmunks all cause similar damage). Then, we will use our proven strategy to rid your yard of the pest depending upon which pest you have. If you have a gopher, you probably have round or horseshoe-shaped mounds with plugged entrance holes, root damage and/or missing plants.
Please don’t wait. The gopher “town” will expand in your yard, leaving behind a path of destruction difficult to remedy. We can help you get your yard, and sanity, back on track.
Call Minnesota Wild Animal Management, Inc. today. We specialize in the humane removal of your pests and will prevent them from returning. (612) 237-8282 : (651) 633-8600 : (763) 785-1414 : (952) 881-6662
Green Pest Control in Minnesota
August 26, 2009
Gophers: Pest Control in Your Yard, Part II
What do gophers actually eat?
Answer: Bad news, gophers eat plants, roots and anything else you might be trying to grow in your yard. A gopher will find something it likes, say, grass for instance and burrow under it, eat the roots and then come above ground and eat the actual blade. A gopher will also seek out a garden. It will find the garden from under the ground and not only eat the roots, but push the plants up from underground. If the whole root is gone the plant cannot be saved, but if you are able to get rid of the gopher and then re-plant the plant right away, you may be able to save it. This often happens with farmers in corn fields especially, although they do not usually replant the corn.
That’s where we come in. At Minnesota Wild Animal Management, Inc., we specialize in the humane removal of all types of rodents, gophers included. We can help you by quickly and efficiently ridding your beloved yard of these pests for good, and you can get back to saving your yard.
Call Minnesota Wild Animal Management, Inc. today. We specialize in the humane removal of your pests and will prevent them from returning. (612) 237-8282 : (651) 633-8600 : (763) 785-1414 : (952) 881-6662
Please visit our website for the next installment in our gopher blog series.
Green Pest Control in Minnesota
August 24, 2009
Gophers: Pest Control in Your Yard, Part I
We have all seen the parts in the movie Caddyshack where the gopher is laughing at Bill Murray while Bill is trying to rid the golf course of this pest. That is how many property owners feel about the gophers as well. Industrious and difficult to trap, the gopher can cause havoc and serious damage to your yard overnight. We were speaking to a homeowner who woke up to 13 new gopher mounds one morning. These mounds are actually the entrances to the tunnels the gophers have been hard at work making. Left unchecked, a gopher “town” can spread over a larger yard so much that the population can reach in the thousands.
If you are tired of the gophers winning, give us a call. Your friendly expert professionals at Minnesota Wild Animal Management, Inc. will rid your yard of these nasty pests in an eco-friendly and efficient manner.
Call Minnesota Wild Animal Management, Inc. today. We specialize in the humane removal of your pest(s) and will prevent them from returning. (612) 237-8282 : (651) 633-8600 : (763) 785-1414 : (952) 881-6662
Please visit our website for the next installment in our gopher blog series.