Categories: All WildLife Blog

3 Things You Should Do If You Think You Have Wildlife Living In Your Home

Realizing you have wildlife living in your home can make you feel helpless and unsafe. It can also be hard to know how to approach the situation. There is so much competing advice floating around, and you want to make sure you’re making the best decision for your home and for your family. If you are faced with wildlife living in your home, here is a guide for what you should do.

1. Avoid Engaging with the Animals

Wildlife living in your home can seem harmless, and you may even think that certain animals, like mice, are pretty cute—but don’t be fooled! Having unwanted houseguests is serious, and you should avoid engaging with the wildlife living in your home at all costs. Animals like mice or rats are full of diseases, and you can get seriously sick from coming into contact with them, and from the contamination to your home. If a scenario arises in which it is necessary for you to physically handle the wildlife living in your home, then make sure to wear gloves. This also extends to their droppings and urine. Mice droppings, urine, and saliva may potentially carry hantavirus, which can infect humans; about 6% of deer mice carry hantavirus. 

Not engaging with the wildlife in your home also means not feeding the animals, whether intentionally or unintentionally. While you should never give an animal that has invaded your home any food, it’s also important to avoid leaving any food out.

2. Leave It to the Experts

A simple Google search will show you a myriad of ways you can personally deal with the wildlife living in your home. While you may be tempted to take the matter into your own hands, your best bet for dealing with the problem efficiently and completely is to get in contact with experts that know what they’re doing. Many suggested remedies are actually wildly ineffective, like using poison or setting traps to deal for mice. Mice mainly reside behind your walls, so traps set out in living space won’t effectively catch them. Other animals, like raccoons or bats, can be quite dangerous when in distress, and should be left to those who know how to handle them. 

Even if you do manage to rid your home of the wildlife, the evacuation will prove temporary if you aren’t able to address how they got into your home in the first place. Wildlife removal experts don’t just remove the wildlife; they also do a thorough investigation of your home, pinpointing exactly how the animals got in, and then making sure that they are unable to return.

3. Contact Removal Services Immediately

If you think you have wildlife living in your home, you need to act as soon as possible. Delaying getting help is one of the worst things you can do, as wildlife can do a lot of damage to your home in a very short period of time. Squirrels living in your home will chew through wood and wires, potentially causing serious structural problems. In chewing, they can also make holes through which other animals can enter your home, exacerbating the problem. Mice work in a similar way, creating tunnels and holes as a method of navigating throughout your home. Mice also breed rapidly, meaning that if you don’t seek help right away, the number of mice in your home will begin to grow exponentially. Mice begin breeding at a young age, and typically give birth five to six times a year, delivering six to eight babies at a time. Getting ahead of the problem means contacting a wildlife removal service as soon as possible.

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