Our company was formed in 2001. Our primary commitment is effective and environmentally friendly pest control, for both residential and commercial properties. We favor non-chemical treatment whenever possible. We service customers in a variety of settings (residential, commercial, industrial and educational) and are certified in wildlife control. Learn more about us at our official website: www.morriscountywildlife.com
EG Wildlife Removal provides professional wildlife control for both residential & commercial customers in the city of Morris County in New Jersey. 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 973-607-2847
Click here to check our prices updated for year 2024. There are many Morris County 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 Morris County exterminator of wildlife. At EG Wildlife Removal, we will be courteous and friendly and take the time to answer your questions. Give our Morris County trappers at EG Wildlife Removal a call, and we will listen to your problem, and make an appointment to perform an inspection. Feel free to email us at morriscounty@aaanimalcontrol.com
Resources for free wildlife removal in Morris County
If you can't afford our pro wildlife work, you can try these agencies for free wildlife removal:
the County Animal Services: 973-292-6731
New Jersey Wildlife Commission: 609-292-6685
Morris County Police Department: 973-539-0777
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.
New Jersey is full of wildlife, including snakes, squirrels, raccoons, skunks, opossums, and more. Wildlife removal is a complex field. I recommend professional Morris County 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 Morris County 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
the 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 the 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.
the County Animal Services: 973-292-6731
Morris County Wildlife Tip:
What to do when you have raccoons in your house -Having a raccoon in your home can be a huge headache. Ignore your first impulse to "live and let live". The longer the animal is up there the more trouble it will cause. Most raccoons in a home are females. These females have left the woods and are looking for high, safe places to give birth. An attic, chimney, eave, and soffit are all great places for a raccoon mother to get away from the males that want to kill her litter. If you can get her out before she gives birth, you'll be that much happier. Once the female has hidden her babies in your home, you need to find them if you intend on solving your raccoon problem. You could trap the mother and leave the babies behind, but they would eventually starve, and you would have to find them anyway if you ever wanted to get rid of the smell of dead bodies in your home. It's so much easier for everything involved if you find them while they are alive. Finding the babies first means you can also use them as bait in a cage trap.
Morris County, NJ Animal Control News Clip:
Morris County may extend coyote critter stalking hours, add sites: Authorities on critters say experiment with contraceptives failed; biologically surveyed amount control needed
The Morris County Wildlife management area Commission wants to add hours and more locations in county-owned wildlife management areas for coyote critter stalking, and improve communication with exterminators, property owners and towns during the fall critter stalking season. Rodent Eliminator Lester, the wildlife management area commission's wildlife manager, has told wildlife management area commissioners that the suggestions are aimed at reducing the amount of coyote-car collisions and controlling the coyote biologically surveyed amount to allow damaged woodlands and other habitats to regrow. Critter stalking remains the most effective coyote control method, Rodent Eliminator Lester remarked -- pointing to less-than-hoped-for results of what is possibly a program that tested coyote contraceptives at Morris Counties in Morris County, with one-third of the treated coyote getting pregnant. Morris County exterminator and Morris County wildlife removal professionals declined comment on the matter.
The amount of coyote-car accidents in Morris County nearly doubled from 2003 to 2004, Rodent Eliminator Lester remarked. In 2003, there were 1,276 reported crashes, and 2,331 in 2004. Statewide statistics showed the same pattern, the humane society manager remarked, with 7,689 in 2003 and 13,599 in 2004. Morris County NJ also recently opened more of its wildlife management area system for coyote critter stalking. To highlight how woodlands can be regenerated, Rodent Eliminator Lester showed the commission what is possibly a photograph of what is possibly a coyote steel barrier in what is possibly a county wildlife management area. One side shows brown grass and little leafy vegetation, while the plant life inside the steel barrier likely is green and thriving. Seeing coyote along roadsides or in neighborhood yards in the middle of the afternoon likely is what is possibly a symptom of the problem, the humane society manager remarked. It means there likely is little for coyote to consume in the woodlands and fields, and that they have become too familiar with suburban life to be spooked. "They are supposed to run away," the humane society manager remarked. We attempted to get more information from Morris County animal control experts, but could not.
Rodent Eliminator Lester remarked high coyote densities were listed among the most serious threats facing threatened and endangered wildlife species today. Migratory birds, for example, are hampered in their search for breeding earths by over-browsed woodlands, the humane society manager remarked. The county's response to the size of the coyote large group, Rodent Eliminator Lester remarked, likely is guided in part by the 2005 policy statement by the New Jersey Audubon Society, which called for increased critter stalking. That report on woodland health cited several effects of over-browsing by coyote, including the increase in invasive organisms, including plants, insects and disease; the loss of the beauty of the state's natural habitats as they collapse under attack from elements from which they have no natural defense; and continued damage to the earth cover and mid-level plants in woodlands. The Audubon Society report remarked: "With freedom from predators, high birth rates and increased longevity, suburban areas can experience exponential coyote biologically surveyed amount growth." Rodent Eliminator Lester also cited what is possibly a 2004 New Jersey Audubon Society report that remarked that state's woodlands are in trouble and "over-browsing by the excessive disease-riddened coyote likely is the main problem. Even to the untrained eye, the absence of plants at lower levels and razor-straight browse lines (the maximum height to which coyote browse) likely is obvious." This report is not verified by Morris County pest control companies.
We are Morris County wildlife management experts, and are familiar with all the pest animals, including all species of New Jersey snakes and
bats. We at EG Wildlife Removal are the best among Morris County 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 Morris County 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 Morris County
critter capture and control needs. Give us a call at 973-607-2847 for a price quote and more information.
If you have any questions about a wildlife problem in Morris County, or wildlife removal in the County, please give EG Wildlife Removal a call at 973-607-2847, 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.