We work 7 days a week - go ahead and call evenings and weekends!
We carry liability insurance and all South Carolina licenses.
Treating both wildlife and customers with courtesy and respect.
We are a professional animal removal company headquartered in Easley, and servicing all of Pickens County, SC. We solve problems with wild critters in the home and around the property. We handle animals such as squirrels, raccoons, skunks, rats, mice, opossums, and even snakes,
bats, and birds. We most commonly receive calls about scratching sounds in your attic, or digging in your lawn, or many other critter problems. We not only remove animals, but we provide a wide array of services, from animal damage
repairs, preventative home repairs, attic cleaning, and more. We are fully licensed and insured in South Carolina, and we answer our phones 24/7. Call us now at (864) 568-7277 for a free price quote and to schedule a same-day or
next day appointment for animal removal.
Our company is a veteran-owned animal control company. We remove nuisance wildlife from homes and office buildings using reliable and safe procedures. Our animal removal experts are fully certified and licensed; we have only experienced professionals on our team. We have commercial general liability insurance for protecting houses and buildings. When we remove animals from your property, we do as humanly as possible, and we take precautions to ensure that nobody gets hurt. Our company’s goal is to always help our customers win their battles with nuisance wildlife and pesky animal pests. Our team of licensed wildlife control technicians are experienced with the various ways of handling erratic wildlife and defusing potentially dangerous situations. We use only the most effective and best animal control strategies and exclusion methods peculiar to different animal species. Our unique approach to wildlife removal and control yields long-term results and you won’t have to worry animals for a very long time. We are available whenever you call; we offer 24/7 animal control service. Our company has been voted the #1 wildlife control company in the metropolitan area 3 consecutive times. Our customers keep us in business, and we appreciate them by giving them our best every single time. We take extra care to meet your expectations, and even exceed them whenever we can.
Thank you for coming to my home on a Sunday to get the snake on my porch - I almost had a heart attack before you showed up!
Easley Pest Animal Trapping solved a problem with bats in our building, after two other South Carolina companies failed - and at a price lower than the others! Thank you!
My regular pest control company couldn't get rid of my rat problem - these guys cleaned them out in five days! I've been rat-free ever since!
Easley Wildlife Trapper Tip of the Month:
What is Rabies?
Rabies is a disease that you might get if bitten by an infected animal. As defined, rabies is "a contagious and fatal zoonotic disease transmissible through saliva of dogs and infected animals to human and causing madness and convulsion". As defined above, contact with saliva of an infected animal leaves you at the risk of getting rabies. According to reports from The World Health Organization, rabies potentially threatens over 3 billion people in Africa and Asia. Rabies is a curable illness but still remains killers of tens of thousands yearly.
Death is inevitable for humans, but dying an agonizing death as a result of bites from rabid animals isn't on anyone wish list. Unfortunately, people's ignorance and sometimes carelessness have placed in over 50,000 recorded deaths. This article treats how you can be infected, symptoms of a pitiful condition, and what to do in case you get bite.
You can get infected if you get bitten by rabid animals, but you can also get if their saliva gets into any open part of your body: mouth, wound or even eye. Generally, rabid dogs are regular cause of rabies, however, animals such as bats and raccoons have been pointed accused fingers at. Domestic animals are rarely carriers compared to their wild counterparts. Rats, possums and squirrels cannot carry the viruses. Getting a wound by a rabid animal is the beginning of a much lot problem if not taken care of properly.
Are there other means you can contact rabies without been bitten? It is rare to contact rabies without bites. That doesn't rule out possibilities as scratches from a rabid animal coupled with its saliva might be a cause. Mucous membranes can be contaminated as well. According to the WHO, human to human transmission is possible but hasn't been confirmed. Sneezing by these animals are also potential causes.
The virus is present in the contaminated saliva and attacks the brain and other nerve tissues. The average incubation in humans is 30 to 60 days. In rare cases, it may hit as high as several years. Initially, an infected individual feels as if hit by flu. General weakness, pain, discomfort and tingling sets in. Individual might later feel itching and soreness around the bite site. Cerebral dysfunction might set in as the virus begins to feed on the brain.
Individual becomes severely ill develop in high fever and becoming easily agitated. This might later result in coma and seizures. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "person might experience delirium, hallucination, insomnia and abnormal behaviors." Either in the Furious Rabies or Paralytic Rabies forms, you stand the risk of becoming aerophobic and hydrophobic. As described by Scientific American, your brain's ability to coordinate breathing, salivation and heartbeat is disrupted by the virus. Victims might end up dying on their own blood. One fifth die from fatal heart arrhythmia, a heart condition involving improper heart beating.
Treatment of rabies might depend on how long the symptoms have appeared. Wash bite spot with soap and use a virus killing cleanser. Get professional care. You might get a vaccine to treat. A shot (not a drink) of rabies immunoglobulin can be administered to neutralize and provide quick protection against rabies.
Will repellents get a rodent out of the attic? (none work well)
Do Bats Migrate?
What is a Conibear Trap?