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Raccoon in House

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What Attracts Raccoons

The ideal habitat for raccoons include ample food sources, proximity to water, and safe places to den. Your house has food sources like garbage cans, pet food, and bird feeders. Female raccoons create nest sites sites in attics, between walls, and inside chimneys to raise baby raccoons. As the pests are adept climbers, they take advantage of nearby trees, downspouts, and utility poles to gain access to homes. Uncovered chimneys and vents, torn screens, loose shingles, and broken windows also heighten the possibility of finding raccoons in the house.

Exclusion is the best raccoon control for your house or property. Our wildlife control professionals can then identify the point of entry for the raccoons in the attic and repair this area to ensure you will never have raccoons in your attic again.

Raccoons are one of the larger pest animals. The most common area we find them is in attics, but they can cause problems on roofs, under houses, and in your yard. Nocturnal critters, you'll hear them running and moving in the middle of the night.

Raccoon in Attic

Raccoons are agile and intelligent creatures that often make their nests inside attics. They gain access by climbing downspouts, scaling siding, and walking across overhanging tree branches. Unsecured vents, chimneys, and attic windows also aid in easy entrance. If raccoons are determined enough, they may even rip apart siding and bend open vent covers to enter attic spaces.  While raccoon repellant can help some, it is only a temporary solution

One of the larger animals that can get into your attic, ceilings have collapsed from the raccoons weight. 

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Raccoon in Attic Removal

Thumping, rustling, and scratching sounds coming from the attic are clear indications of animal infestations. Raccoons are especially playful and like to tumble about, making loud noises that disturb residents. Young raccoons also like to chatter and chirp when calling for their mothers. Additionally, while raccoons generally dispose of waste away from nesting sites, they may let their droppings and urine collect in attics. The overwhelmingly foul smell quickly permeates houses.

Raccoon in Chimney

Raccoons commonly den in chimneys because they are often unsecure and resemble tree hollows. Raccoons can manually remove chimney caps. 

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Raccoon Removal from Chimney

Do not open fireplace in an attempt to rescue a raccoon from your chimney. You will give access to your entire house to the pest. The professionals at Trutech will create an ideal solution to get rid of a raccoon in your chimney.

Raccoon on Roof

Raccoons often access rooftops by climbing trees, siding, and drainage pipes. Raccoons on roofs can cause significant damage to your property. Females are known to destroy soffits, fascia boards, shingles, vents, and insulation to establish denning sites. Once a raccoon creates or enlarges a hole in the rooftop, it becomes an easy pathway to the attic.
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Raccoon Control on Roof

Preventing a raccoon from climbing onto your roof is difficult. These clever creatures can climb virtually any surface. Raccoon traps are the best way to get rid of a raccoon on the roof, but the trap must be monitored frequently. Installing metal flashing and tree trimming is the best way to stop a raccoon from climbing onto your house.

Raccoon Under the House

The spaces beneath decks or porches are especially inviting because they allow raccoons to remain in close proximity to sources of food and water.

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Raccoons Removal from under House

To get rid of raccoons under your house, we start with trapping to remove the animals currently under there and then can install a product called dig defense to keep those animals from gaining access back under decks and foundations.

Raccoons in Backyard

Signs that raccoons are in the backyard include ransacked trash cans, empty bird feeders, tracks, the presence of urine and feces, and garden damage. Their unique ability to grasp objects with their opposable thumbs coupled with their natural curiosity frequently leads raccoons to break into homes and outdoor sheds. Finally, expensive landscaping is often damaged in the pest’s search for insects found in the soil.

Raccoons in Trees

Tree hollows are the preferred natural den site for raccoons. Though sightings of the pest are rare given their nocturnal nature, property owners are able to detect the presence of raccoons in trees. For instance, raccoons often leave tracks in the dirt around the base of trees they’re living in. These tracks are distinct in their resemblance to tiny human hands. Their claws, which make them excellent climbers, are used to scratch trees, walls, and fences, and finding scuffed paint and tree bark typically points to raccoon infestations. At night, residents may hear chattering, growling, or snarling sounds. Finally, the presence of droppings at the base of trees points to the existence of raccoon populations in the area.

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Raccoons Control in Yard

Protecting your entire yard from a raccoon is not feasible. It is possible to protect target areas of your property. Installing barriers or electric fences can prevent raccoon damage inside a garden. Conical tree guards will stop a raccoon from climbing trees.

Raccoons in Trash

One of the most effective preventative measures you can take is to secure your garbage can.

Raccoons keep varied omnivorous diets and common meals include berries, nuts, fish, insects, waterfowl, and bird eggs. As the pests are also opportunistic feeders, they won’t hesitate to scavenge in trash cans and compost piles for discarded bits of human food. Raccoons are especially enticed by garbage bins without well-fitted lids as their nimble hands and impressive dexterity allows them to easily break into the trash.

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