Bat Removal in Los Angeles
Bat removal in Los Angeles requires patience, skill, and usually a tall ladder. Bat removal experts are always on call to remove bats when they get into homes by mistake. We have several species of bats in Los Angeles, and when the young learn to fly they tend to make mistakes. A bats lifespan after its first year of life is somewhere in the neighborhood of 20 to 30 years. An older bat will not make the mistake of getting into your house, but the younger ones may. If this happens to you feel free to call 24 and seven for emergency bat removal.
Adult Bat
800-714-8727
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Los Angeles has more wildlife than the desert. Los Angeles also has more to offer the desert. Any animal who has lived in attic of a home is going to prefer to live in attic of our home. They are always close to food, water, and it never gets cold because this strange looking cave is heated. They are willing to put up with those irritating people who lived downstairs and wake up every morning. But when the sun goes down in Los Angeles, the bats are busy. Although bats do urinate and defecate all over the attic, they do provide us a service. As a chemical free form of pest control. A single bat may eat as many as 1000 mosquitoes in one night, as they fly over the water of a pond or drain off. And to sit by the water’s edge and watch bats can provide plenty of amusement.
Bats in the walls or attic of a home in Los Angeles have been known to be a nuisance with their screeching and scratching and clawing noises. It brings visions of a rodent to a home owners mind, chewing wires and structural wood. Bats do not have the ability to chew wood or the plastic on wires. Their teeth are structured for catching and killing and eating small insects. Bats are not a member of the rodent family, flying mice, or anything along those lines. They are actually closer to the primate family than anything else to to their bone structure. However the destruction they do can have lasting effects on the occupants of the home health-wise. I want you to be aware of the health risk, without using scare tactics. CDC.gov is where you can find the facts about the health risk of bat guano in your attic and walls of your home. These facts are published by the government as an educational tool for you to make a decision about your family’s safety based on fact.
