Home Owner Maintenance Tip
from Lem McSpadden and Brian McSpadden A+ Inspection Services
(Member of the Integrity Inspection Group, LLC)
We enjoy trying to make sure that your home stays your most valuable asset. One of the best ways we know to help, is to pass along some simple maintenance tips that most people don't know could save thousands of dollars.
Keeping Pests Out of the House
Each fall, when the air turns brisk and the leaves begin to drop, it seems every animal and bug in the area wants to become your roommate. Squirrels bed down in the eaves. Mice storm the garage and
shimmy up pipes to your bedroom walls.
And while they're tearing up your property—and potentially exposing your family to hantavirus,
bubonic plague, and salmonella—they lustily copulate and bring forth more toothy
progeny. Six mice breed into 60 in 90 days. Female mice and rats can produce as many as 12 pups every 23
days. Squirrels pump out as many as six infants a year. And they do it so stealthily you may not
know you have a problem until it's too late.
Battling
There are many clever and diabolical ways to capture or dispatch mice, rats, and squirrels, the Big
Three among household invaders. But all options fall into one of two basic categories: traps or
poisons. Poisons take care of the problem quietly, with minimal effort. The animal simply ingests
the bait, then goes off to die "peacefully," either through internal hemorrhaging or by starvation
(some poisons block the animal's ability to absorb nutrition). The downside: There's no predicting
whether the doomed animal will die outside or expire inside your walls.
Traps, on the other hand, work instantly and leave no doubt as to the outcome. In the case of mice,
you can choose between traps that kill and those that capture them live. Rats get no such break; all
their traps are of the lethal variety. Squirrels are typically trapped live, which is more humane as
long as the traps are monitored. "You have to keep checking that trap every day," says Ray Navarro,
a technician with Cooper Pest Solutions in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, "You don't want the squirrel
to die from lack of food or water."
Once a squirrel is caught, what you can do with it depends on state and local regulations. For
instance, Gene Jezek, a wildlife biologist and co-owner of a Critter Control franchise in St. Louis,
Missouri, can release live-trapped squirrels in his home state, as long as he takes them 3 to 5 miles
from the trap point. But if he nabs a squirrel in Illinois, he's obliged to put it to sleep. A local pest
control pro should be able to tell you the relevant laws in your area.
Evicting squirrels isn't cheap. Jezek charges up to $250 to remove the first one and $69 for each
one snagged after that. And it's not unusual for him to trap five to 10 squirrels in a single house.
"It's a lot of money," he acknowledges. "But most people figure it's better than giving their houses
over to the squirrels."
Prevention
A better—and far cheaper—way to deal with uninvited guests is to keep them from getting in at all.
It's a little like burglar-proofing: If you make it tough enough to break in, they'll give up and go
elsewhere. The pest-control folks call this "exclusion," a fancy name for plugging entry holes. It's tedious work—mice can wriggle through an opening just ¼ inch across—but if done correctly, you
reap lots of benefits: no traps or poisons to handle, and no decomposing carcasses (or, worse, angry
live critters) to get rid of. Plus, you can do much of the work yourself using items commonly found
in the hardware store.
Critters usually get past the gates you aren't guarding very carefully: the garage, the basement, the roof, anywhere they find a crevice big enough to slip through. To make sure you aren't vulnerable this fall, ask a local firm to examine and troubleshoot your house. "Most companies will be happy to send someone out to inspect and make recommendations," says Greg Baumann, technical director of the National Pest Management Association. Then you have the option of hiring the pest control
firm or a contractor to plug the holes, or doing it yourself. Whatever you do, Baumann says, don't
defeat your preventive work by inadvertently rolling out the welcome mat. "It doesn't make sense to
pay someone to do exclusion work and then leave the garage door wide open until bedtime. By
then, they're already inside."
Please feel free to forward this maintenance tip to your friends and/or family members so they too can maintain their real estate investment.
Lem McSpadden and Brian McSpadden "Your Property Consultants for Life"
A+ Home Inspection Services
548 N Willow Ave, Suite D-E
Phone: 931.520.1700
Fax: 800.520.3387
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