Great Falls lies in the heart of Montana, in Cascade County. Our animal control service area includes the towns of Sun River, Gordon, Vaughn, Fort Shaw, Hardy, Cascade, Ulm, Sand Coulee, Tracy, Centerville, Stockett, Belt, Armington, Fife, Highwood, Shonkin, Portage, Floweree, Black Eagle, Carter, & Fort Benton. We are near the counties of Choteau County, Teton County, and Lewis & Clark County.
Wildlife Removal Montana provides professional wildlife control for both residential & commercial customers in the city of Great Falls in Montana. We offer custom animal control solutions for almost any type of wildlife problem, whether it be the noises of squirrels running through the attic, a colony of bats living in a building, animals digging in your yard, or the destructive behavior of a raccoon or other critter, we have the experience and the tools to quickly and professionally solve your problem. For a consultation and price quote, give us a call at 406-564-1300
Click here to check our prices updated for year 2024. There are many Great Falls pest control companies for animals out there, but not all of them are licensed and insured professionals. Make sure that you hire a competent expert for your Great Falls exterminator of wildlife. At Wildlife Removal Montana, we will be courteous and friendly and take the time to answer your questions. Give our Great Falls trappers at Wildlife Removal Montana a call, and we will listen to your problem, and make an appointment to perform an inspection. Feel free to email us at greatfalls@aaanimalcontrol.com
Resources for free wildlife removal in Great Falls
If you can't afford our pro wildlife work, you can try these agencies for free wildlife removal:
Cascade County Animal Services: 406-455-8492
Montana Wildlife Commission: 406-444-2535
Great Falls Police Department: 406-727-7688
These agencies will only help with certain types of wildlife problems, and they are not always consistent. If you want a high quality of
help done right, call our company.
Montana is full of wildlife, including snakes, squirrels, raccoons, skunks, opossums, and more. Wildlife removal is a complex field. I recommend professional Great Falls wildlife control services if you want to solve a critter problem legally and correctly. For example, we specialize in animals in the attic, which have broken into the house and almost always have a nest of baby animals. It is necessary to perform correct preventative repairs to keep pest animals a out of your house for good. We perform full building inspection, do the the repairs and we also offer attic decontamination if necessary. Rats and mice love to live in attics, and can chew wires or leave droppings. Some Great Falls animals frequently enter homes, and correct removal is not a simple task.
DOG or CAT: If you need assistance with a domestic animal, such as a dog or a cat, you need to call your local
Cascade County Animal Control
for assistance. They can help you out with issues such as stray dogs, stray cats, vaccinations, licenses,
pet adoption, lost pets, and more. If you have a wildlife problem, you can try calling the Cascade County animal control, and see what they have to
say, but they will certainly not help you with a complex wildlife problem such as critters in your attic. They are a free government agency that
helps with dog and cat issues only.
Cascade County Animal Services: 406-455-8492
Great Falls Wildlife Tip:
What Is The Best Trap To Catch Squirrel In? - If you are hoping to trap squirrels, you need to make sure that you have a supply of foods they enjoy. This includes the stereotypical nuts and seeds alongside pieces of vegetables or fresh fruit. Humane traps that can be used for squirrels include "Raccoon traps" which are cage-like and can be filled with food to entice the little varmint into it. Squirrels should then be relocated many miles away in the country, as repellent devices and methods do not work and releasing the squirrel is more humane.
Other traps include ones that are fastened to or near trees and contain poisonous food. These can only be used for protecting trees during certain times of the year. Many people will instead opt to select for the live traps and this is often the quickest way to trap the squirrel. They are particularly great when they are in a building. Then make sure to seal it off so the animals can't get back in and relocate them many miles away from any homes. The most popular type of trap is the raccoon trap, but you should remember when handling live squirrels to wear protective clothing at all times, as they can transmit some very unpleasant diseases to you through contact.
Great Falls, MT Animal Control News Clip:
Pat Durkin column: Trappers shouldn't sink snake and bat plan
Department of natural resources office document has wide support When the Legislature's Joint Committee for Review of Administrative Rules conducts a hearing on a two-year raccoon and possum season package on Tuesday, let's hope they flog their pals on the Assembly and Senate natural resources committees for sliding this controversy onto their plate with help from the state's trapping lobby.
This rat, mouse, or other rodent document from the Hunting office of Natural Resources has the unprecedented backing of all legitimate Montana wildlife management groups. Even so, it was scuttled this winter by the Association of Montana Critter trap Clubs and Rep. Scott animal removal expert, R-Great Falls, critter gitter of the Assembly's Committee on Natural Resources. The Great Falls SPCA could not be reached for a comment.
The expert trapper, of course, insists the trappers didn't hand him the monkey wrench. Fine. So it's just coincidence that the only item the critter trap lobby opposes - a four-day mid-February humane wildlife trap critter trap north of U.S. 8 - may be the same matter animal removal expert cites when claiming he likes 90 percent of the department of natural resources office document. For more info about pest control for animals in Great Falls, call a local animal trapping company.
Sound reasoning and recent events should persuade the Republican-controlled joint committee to overturn animal removal expert's objections, accept the new snake and bat rules, and implement this two-year trial. We all must share Montana's natural resources. Each autumn, hikers deal with nuisance wildlife and small-game exterminating companies on land, while duck exterminating companies tolerate boaters and anglers on water. Neither group storms the Capitol to demand evictions, so why reward the critter trap lobby for me-first demands? Despite this, wildlife removal services are not a free service in Cascade County.
Besides, how have trappers earned special treatment? Thirty-six of them died in crashes this year, yet the Montana association opposes tying drunken trapping to a person's driver's license. Montana and make that link, and their trapping death rate may be a third of Montana's. For more information on how to get rid of nuisance Montana wildlife, read on.
In the 2004-05 season, Montana had one fatality for each 17,988 trappers, Montana had one fatality per 15,240, and Montana had one fatality per 5,892. Meanwhile, animal removal expert became so upset with the department of natural resources office and wildlife management groups that he wrote a raccoon and possum-management plan. Talk about a flop. His eight-tiered plan was such a bust that one suspects he was whispering in Tom Braat's ear in 1989 when the Packers chose Tony Marich over Barry The Great Falls exterminating company expert, Derrick Thomas and Deon The Great Falls exterminating company expert.
The expert trapper sought a joint hearing with the Senate's Natural Resources Committee, hoping to fast-track his bill, but that panel's critter gitter, Sen. Neal Kezie, R-Elkhorn, either overlooked or ignored animal removal expert's requests. When animal removal expert chaired his own hearing on April 5, he endured nonpartisan jabs from citizen exterminating companies and fellow humane society officers on the Assembly's Natural Resources Committee.
Rep. Al Ott, R-Meadow Junction, angrily chastised animal removal expert for dragging the committee down a road it doesn't want to go. Rep. Tom Hebl, D-Great Falls, declared the hearing a waste of time and walked out. Results from Thursday's statewide fish and wildlife hearings also should also interest the joint committee. Before the hearings, animal removal expert declared the Legislature wouldn't modify his 2-gallon snake and bat-bait law unless he saw 30-40 votes against baiting. Do 32-88 and 55-45 votes against this harmful practice meet his criterion?
These factors suggest the public might not like the department of natural resources office, but they realize rat, mouse, or other rodent biologists are a lesser evil than humane society officers who ignore their own shortcomings. For now, though, this festering mess rests with the joint committee. Its members need look back only six years for guidance. That's when humane society officers let Montana's mourning dove season become law, and we've heard little about it since. That's what happens with phony matters.
The same silence would result if the joint committee ignores the critter trap lobby's selfishness and rewards the nuisance wildlife wildlife management community's cooperative efforts. It's time to steer animal removal expert and the critter trap lobby onto a trail that helps trappers while leaving raccoon and possum exterminating companies alone.
We are Great Falls wildlife management experts, and are familiar with all the pest animals, including all species of Montana snakes and
bats. We at Wildlife Removal Montana are the best among Great Falls nuisance wildlife companies and can solve all animal damage issues. Our wildlife operators are skilled at bird control and
bat removal, and would be happy to serve your Great Falls bat control or pigeon and bird control needs with a professional solution. Opossums, skunks, moles, and other animals
that can damage your lawn - we are the exterminators who can capture and remove them. Our specialty is removal of animals in homes such as raccoons in the attic or squirrels in the attic.
Our professional pest management of wildlife and animals can solve all of your Great Falls
critter capture and control needs. Give us a call at 406-564-1300 for a price quote and more information.
If you have any questions about a wildlife problem in Great Falls, or wildlife removal in Cascade County, please give Wildlife Removal Montana a call at 406-564-1300, and we will listen to your problem, give you a price quote, and
schedule an appointment, usually same day or next day, to solve the problem.