Get Rid Squirrels Loft

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - girl looking into loft

If you have Squirrels in your loft then we have the answers you need to achieve long term squirrel control.

 

Get Rid Squirrels Loft gives recommendations and advice on how to get the squirrels out of your loft for good!

Learn what works (click here) and what does not.

 

Rodents, Such as Squirrels in Attic, Means Attic Wire Damage and Thousands of House Fires (gov. estimate 15,000+) Each Year in the USA - Why? A Squirrel's front teeth grow a half a foot in length each year. So, they are constantly needing to gnaw and chew to keep their teeth short enough to be able to eat. Squirrels in Attics do an enormous amount of wire damage. The longer you have a squirrels your loft - the more wire damage. Learn More: (Click Here)

 

Moth Balls in the Attic to get rid of squirrels in the loft?

 

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - mothballs

Using Moth Balls in the attic to get squirrels out of your loft is illegal in most juristictions because it is toxic to humans and pets.

Learn More: Click Here

 

Squirrel Traps to get rid of squirrels in loft?

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Red Squirrel in trapLive / Humane Squirrel traps - What you need to know:

80% of trapped and release squirrels return home. Squirrels have amazing homing abilities!

Learn more: Click Here

 

 

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Red Squirrel on cageProfessional Squirrel Trappers

Pest Control Inspectors report that the vast majority (80-90%) of observed pest control operators release a trapped animal within two blocks of the capture site.

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Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Pounds SterlingPest Control Companies and the "average" yearly cost per home for trapping and squirrel entrance / exit house loft sealing:

It really adds up. And is usually a recurring expense.

Learn More: Click Here(link coming soon)

 

 

Rat Traps to get rid of squirrels in the loft?

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Rat Trap

Very often squirrels caught in rat traps are not instantly killed by the trap and the injured squirrel runs, with the trap, back to its nest in your loft and dies.

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Squirrel Poison to get rid of squirrels in loft?

Get Rid Squirrels Loft

Most squirrel poisons are anti-coagulants - blood thinners. These are not one feed poisons. The pest consumes the poison in the bait repeatedly until internal bleeding causes the squirrel to become sick and die. Pest control operators and pest control suppliers often tell the customers that the pest will become extremely thirsty and not die in your loft or house walls because the pest will go outside to seek water and then die. This is not true. The squirrel will more often than not retreat to its nest in your loft or house wall and die there.

Learn More: (link coming soon)

 

Squirrel Poison and Secondary Poisonings

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Pet CemeteryEvery year scores of cats and dogs receive "secondary poisoning" from partially consuming or using a poisoned pest as a play / chew toy . Some of the family pets die. Most become very ill and run up a considerable veterinary bill too.

Learn More: (link coming soon)

 

 

 

Something most people have never heard of - Pest Control Strobe Lights.

This loft had a 10 year squirrel problem

until pest control strobe lights were used - now for more than two years the squirrels are no longer in the loft but are still in the yard.

The flash last only 1/30th of a second - 70 to 90 flashes per minute.

 

Here is a photo of a pest control strobe light. It uses 4.8 watts of electricity - same as an average night light.

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Pest Control Strobe Light

How it works:

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - eye diagram

The ciliary muscle in the eye controls the expansion and contraction of the pupil. The usual adjustments made by this muscle are small.  In response to the strobes in a dark (naturally dark or becomes dark at night) environment this muscle has to make dramatic adjustments (140-180 times per minute). An ophthalmologist I spoke to, at a world-renowned clinic in Scottsdale AZ, USA likened it to this: Imagine you lift a ten pound dumbbell weight one time. Then imagine that you lifted the same weight 1,500 times in a ten minute period. Your arm would be hurting for days. The ophthalmologist said the strobes would have the same effect on rodent (and other animal pests’) eyes.  RESULT: THE PESTS LEAVE

The Squirrel Control Strobe Lights featured in the photos above are Rodent Strobe's pest control strobe lights.

 

Rodent Strobe - Works All Over the World - Ships All Over the World!

Here is Rodent Strobe's Product Line of 400,000 Candle Power Strobes.

Each Strobe has a 10 Year Warranty (strobe's internal electronics) and one year on the bulb (inside light house like lens casing). The average bulb life is 4-5 years.

 

Click on the pictures below for product details or to purchase:

400K 12ft. To Get Rid of Squirrels In Loft400K 62ft. To Get Rid of Squirrels In Loft400K 2 Strobe Assembly To Get Rid of Squirrels In Loft

 

Some product testimonies:

"I have had problems with squirrels getting in my attic for about ten years. The noise they made bothered me and I hated the holes they made in my house. I called a nationwide pest control service and they gave me the name of a man who would come out and trap the squirrels. The man charged me $250.00. I hired him two different times but did not notice a difference. Then I had the strobe lights installed. They work. They ran the squirrels out".

A.M. Memphis, TN

 

"We had a terrible experience with roof rats in our attic. We tried pest control companies, traps and poison and nothing worked. Finally, we heard about the Rodent Strobe pest control strobe lights. After installing them, the rats were gone within just a couple of days and have not been back - we kept the strobes on to keep the rats from coming back in. These strobes are the only thing that worked! I highly recommend them".

C.P. Phoenix, AZ, USA

 

"I can testify that the Rodent Strobe solution to invading squirrels in the attic works! After several continuous repairs to chewed entrances I became desperate when it would happen again. I heard about Rodent Strobe on the radio and contacted them right away. The results were almost immediate. After a couple of days they left and they haven't been back! Thanks to this ingenious plan, I can now relax".

C.S. Memphis, TN

 

For seven years I had problems with roof rats in my Scottsdale, Arizona home. I tried everything to get rid of them. We had our home sealed twice and set traps numerous times, but we still kept having problems. We hired 3 or 4 pest control companies and they could not solve our problems. We had periods of no attic noise and no smell, but the rats would come back following previous generations’ urine scent trails (which can last for years). One day after a recent re-infestation we heard a rat in the attic above our living room. As I heard it near a ceiling light fixture the light started to flicker and made an electric buzzing sound. I realized the rodent was chewing on the wires in the attic and it dawned on me that “the smell” was not our biggest concern – A house fire was!

My efforts to solve this problem once and for all intensified. These efforts led me to strobe lights for pest control. After trying strobes from several different manufacturers, I found what I believe to be the best strobe lights manufactured to date-and solved my own pest problems.

After two years of research, patent searches and counsel, product development and testing, field research and lab experiments, consultations with pest control professionals including owners of pest control companies and leaders in the academic arena, I have developed a line of sturdy and long lasting pest control products which have been proven to get rid of squirrels in the loft. Rodent Strobe is “the long term solution™”.

 

Kevin Peterson

President

Rodent Strobe Inc.

Click Here to go to:

Rodentstrobe.com

 

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Moth balls in the loft to get rid of squirrels in the loft is illegal in most jurisdictions and toxic to humans.

 

Get Rid Squirrels Loft - MothballsThe use of moth balls in a loft or other spaces to get rid of squirrels in the attic is illegal in all 50 US states . If you use moth balls to get rid of squirrels, bats in the attic, and raccoons in the attic or any other vertebrate pest or even suggest their use to someone you are committing, at least a misdemeanor, and even a felony in many states. If you are considering using Moth balls to get rid of squirrels in the attic then you need to read this - Moth balls are toxic to humans and pets. Most moth balls are made from naphthalene which is derived from coal tar. The gas emitted from moth balls is heavier than air and will seep from your attic into the lower levels of your home – your living areas. Many people will recommend moth balls to get rid of squirrels in the attic and other pests. In states such as Arizona, California, Florida and New York this simple recommendation is a felony. Moth balls take oxygen out of the air. Their purpose is to suffocate moths in a contained environment. It is similar, very similar, to running a car engine in a garage with the garage door closed. Several years ago a friend had a yard man tell her to put moth balls in her attic to drive out the squirrels. It worked for a while but the amount of moth balls she had to put in the attic spaces to drive out the squirrels made her house stink of moth balls. Now, my friend could not smell the moth balls after several days, but everyone who entered her house was over-whelmed by the odor. I have asthma and when visiting her it greatly bothered my asthma. Two years later the lowest places in her house, such as bathroom cabinets, linen closets, etc. still smells of moth balls. Many people who make this huge mistake then spend years trying to get the moth ball smell out of their house. Good luck! To this day, freshly laundered towels that have been placed in her bathroom cabinets soon acquire the smell of the moth balls. Again, my friend could not smell the moth balls but everyone who entered her house could. Same thing with squirrels and mice - they get used to the smell - unless you use so many moth balls that the toxic vapors are so heavy that the squirrels or other rodents can’t stay – which means these heavier than air toxic vapors are seeping down into your living areas and into your lungs and into your blood stream. Did you know that babies that have been wrapped in blankets which were stored with moth balls have been found to have high levels of naphthalene in their blood streams? Moth balls for squirrels in attic control, been there – smelled that, in most cases it is illegal and very toxic.

 

    Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Moth Balls are toxicSymptoms of MothBall Exposure:

    Nose, eyes, and lung irritation.

    Difficulty breathing, asthma worsening, asthma attacks.

    Headaches, nausea, dizziness.

    Cancer – moth balls are possible carcinogens.

    Effect on babies- skin rash, anemia, jaundice.

     

     

     

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    Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Ruby SlippersA Squirrel's Motto:

    "There's No Place Like Home"

    Squirrel Traps and the Homing Behavior of Squirrels

    Eighty percent of squirrels in attics that are trapped in live squirrel traps and released within two miles will return to your their home.

    This number drops in percentage with each mile that the squirrel is taken from the capture site. At a 5-7 mile range a significant, but reduced, number of trapped and released squirrels still return to the capture site. In field experiments approximately 5% of trapped and released squirrels returned from as far a 10-12 miles from where they were caught in live squirrel traps. One squirrel trapped and carried about twenty-five miles away from the squirrel trap site returned to its home.

    In the two experiments, from which the figures were taken, over 100 individual squirrels were trapped and released. One squirrel trapping and homing behavior study was performed  by the University Of Connecticut. The other squirrel trapping and homing behavior study was performed by a large pest control company over a three year period. In each case the trapped squirrels were caught in live squirrel traps and transported with special attention paid to the prevention of the squirrels having visual cues along the traveled paths aka. they could not see where they were going. This was done because squirrels that are trapped and then can see along the route to their release site almost always find there way back. Hey, a squirrel can turn left at the park and then right at the McDonalds too.

    Still if they can't see the relocation route - how do they find their way back? One study by University of Laval in Quebec, Canada found that red squirrels, when released from the squirrel traps, had a basic sense of the direction which they needed to travel back to the place where they were trapped. But, the trapped and released squirrels did not seem to have any knowledge of how far they were from the place where the squirrel traps were set and they were captured. Seventeen squirrels were trapped and released in this squirrel trap and release homing behavior study.  This squirrel trapping study suggest that the squirrels use two strategies to return the the site where the squirrels were trapped. The first is the squirrels innate sense of direction orientation. The second was the exploratory trips the squirrels made toward the place where the squirrel traps were placed and they were captured. Since the squirrels did not see the travel route  form the squirrel trap placement to the release sites how did they find their way back home if they had no visual cues by which to orient themselves? Was it a re-adjusting of their internal sense of direction or their keen sense of smell that enable them to pick of the pheromones of familiar squirrels? In another study done on a different member of the rodent family suggest that visual cues or a lack of them may not be the only mechanism of squirrel homing behavior. In this other rodent homing study the mice (cousins of squirrels) were trapped. Half of the mice were blinded. The blind mice found their way back to the place where they were trapped equal to the seeing mice. This study was repeated ten times with a new set of mice each time and the blind mice found their way home just as well as the seeing mice. Still thinking about using squirrel traps to solve your squirrels in attic problem? Still thinking about using squirrel traps to solve your squirrels in attic problem? Still thinking about using squirrel traps to solve your squirrels in attic problem? Sorry for repeating myself  - but squirrel traps can put you into a repetitive cycle too. And if you hire a professional squirrel trapper the costs are very often repetitive too.

    The preponderance of the returning squirrels in most squirrel trap studies are males. Within a two mile range this male to female returning squirrel ratio was not as pronounced. Closer to, and up to, the two mile range most of the returning, trapped and released squirrels were males. After two miles the number of trapped and returning female squirrels dropped significantly. The two experiments were performed in opposing seasons. The University of Connecticut experiment was conducted in the middle of winter. The pest control company's experiment was conducted over three consecutive summers. The term of the pest control company's experiment would have covered the period during which the female squirrels would have had nursing/blind baby squirrels in their nests. Again, few of these female squirrels returned to their nesting sites to care for their baby squirrels if they were carried more than two miles away from the live squirrel trap site.

    In the University of Connecticut experiment the trapped squirrels were individually identified and marked via toe clippings and released. The squirrels that returned to the capture site were recaptured and taken a farther distance away and still half of them returned - all of theses second trip squirrels were males.

    Very little is known about the internal mechanisms of a squirrel's homing ability. Other rodents show the same abilities.  In one experiment of the homing abilities of mice almost all of the trapped and release mice returned to their nesting areas when taken and release up to two miles away.

    In each of these squirrel trapping experiments the miles measured were in straight lines ("as a crow flies"). In the pest control company's experiments the mileage was measured also in a straight line but in some cases the additional precaution of traveling in a zigzag pattern was employed and this additional measure did not seem to confound the squirrels innate homing abilities. Again, 'There's no place like home" - even for a squirrel in the attic.

     

    Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Grey Squirrel with nutThe Reason Squirrels Return? - NUTS!

    Squirrels spend a great deal of their time foraging for food. A squirrel will scent mark and bury hundreds of acorns to see itself through the winter. Imagine if you had all your winters food stored in one place. Imagine that you spent a great deal of your time protecting your territory and food hidden on it. Ever heard of a Fort?, Castle?, Bank Vault? And imagine that your saved stores could last for two years. And someone kidnapped you and took you far away from your home and its food. I'd be back too! And  if you don't return? Another squirrel will scent out your hidden food stores and move right in.

     

     

     

    The Get Rid of Squirrels in the Loft Solution:

    With pest control strobe lights these squirrels in attic problems are addressed. First, we have found that if attic squirrels are living in a house wall and that they access the wall cavities through a space which is protected by a high intensity strobe that the squirrel will give up going to its nesting area in the wall. It just is not worth it to the squirrels because the pest control strobe's intensity is just too much for the squirrels in the attic - see Rodent Strobe's How It Works page.

    Second, squirrels in attics are good mothers. If their young are in what the mother squirrel deems an "unsafe" area she will move them to another place that she deems as safe. We recommend that a person using our pest control strobe lights simply turn off the strobes for a few hours at a time during the first few days to allow the mother squirrels to move their young squirrels from the attic. Then when all the squirrels in the attic are gone - turn on the strobes and leave them on. Squirrel problem solved! No dead, rotting squirrels in attic spaces. No dead or sick family pets. No repeating and repeating the squirrel trapping nightmare.

     

    Squirrels in Loft Control:

    The Foraging Behavior of Loft Squirrels and How it Relates to Effective Squirrels in the Loft Control via Squirrel Traps.

     

    Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Grey Squirrel with gathered nuts

    The most active foraging time for the squirrels that live in your attic is the fall. As the fall season progresses the squirrels spend a greater percentage of their time foraging and hiding their winter food stores. The attic squirrel's typical behavior is to carry a nut, such as an acorn or pecan, about 50 feet from the tree from which it is harvested and then pretend to bury it. Yes you read right - squirrels are smart. We protect our money with passwords and pin codes. An attic squirrel protects his or her food stores by pretending to bury it as many as three times. The squirrel will dig a hole. Then the squirrel will pretend to put the nut in the hole. The squirrel covers the hole with leaves and dirt and repeats this process. And, if a squirrel sees that it is being watched it will then repeat this process with the same nut for several days. The squirrel will dig up its buried acorns and relocate each nut with the same deceptive behavior for each nut. Then after a full day of foraging and hiding its winter stores it will retreat at dusk and will be a happy squirrel in attic - with food stores in your yard. Researchers have even dug around areas where a squirrel has buried a nut in the sight of the squirrel and the squirrel will then multiply its deceptive tactics in order to protect its winter food.

    Squirrels are very territorial, especially the male squirrels. This makes squirrel control via squirrel traps very difficult. If a male squirrel is caught in a cage squirrel trap and released into an area with other male squirrels which are protecting their nut stores the trapped and relocated squirrel is chased away.  Squirrel Control by other squirrels! This is another reason why the preponderance of squirrels that are caught in a squirrel trap that return to their capture sight are male. Females are more readily accepted into a new squirrel community especially by the male squirrels in the area. Squirrel trapping professionals love this because you will be calling them back to fish dead baby squirrels out of a wall. I talked to one pest professional who owns a rather large pest control company which is back-logged with squirrel control work setting squirrel traps and house sealing for at least a month in the months from October to May. He told me that by the time he gets through with the added up squirrel trapping and house sealing charges to the typical home it averages from $1,200 - 2,600 per home. Squirrel Control can be expensive! And, if the pest professional who trapped the squirrel in the attic releases the squirrel within 2 miles of your attic (and according to pest control inspectors most do) the squirrel eighty percent of the time will make it back to your attic within about 2 weeks.

     

    Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Grey Squirrel in cageI am in the pest control industry. I have to be familiar with many aspects of the industry. In one of the pest control classes I attended, taught by a pest control inspector, the inspector informed us that integrity was a big part of keeping our state license. As part of ensuring this, the inspectors would “shadow”/observe unawares a pest control operator and before an inspector does a site, chemical, equipment, paper work, and service vehicle inspection he/she would often watch the pest professional from a distance without the pest control operator’s knowledge he/she was being watched/inspected. The inspector teaching the class said that in the vast majority of the times an animal was live trapped at a customer’s residence or business the animal pest was unethically released within two blocks of where it was caught. In this case the pest would just return to the capture site. Pest control operators in most states are required to take the pest at least two miles away from the capture site before releasing it. The inspector told the class that our license would be in jeopardy if we were caught doing this unethical practice.

     

    So if you hire a pest control company to live trap and/or seal your home or business - what certainty do you have that the pest control employee won’t just let the squirrel, mouse, or rat out of the live trap just down the street? Again this was not the exception but the majority according to the inspector’s class.  And if you snap trap the pest, or glue trap the pest, or zap trap the pest – What keeps other animal pest from following the scent trail to your home or property?

     

    Squirrel Traps - Live Traps or Snap Traps: Are these the best way to get rid of squirrels in the loft without additional problems?

     

    Getting rid of squirrels in attic via rat traps?The Grey Squirrel's Latin name is Sciurus Carolinensis. Grey squirrels mate twice a year - in the early spring or late winter and in the summer. The mother squirrel will give birth to her young about 45 days after mating. A squirrel has 4 to 6 baby squirrels per litter. A pair of healthy squirrels could produce a dozen offspring each year. In twelve months the offspring become breeding adults. Each litter does not leave its mother's nest for the first 10 to 12 weeks of its life. It is totally dependant on its mother's milk to live. If you have squirrels in the attic there most likely are baby squirrels in your attic 40% of the year. Squirrel trapping or poisoning could leave baby squirrels up in your attic in a nesting site to die of starvation. A mother squirrel will nest in the safest place she can find to protect her young. Attics are ideal places for squirrels to build their nests. The cavities in the your home's walls are many times chosen by nesting squirrels - the radiant heat in the winter and the cool air from air conditioning make the interior house walls good nesting sites for mother squirrels. These cavities are accessed by the squirrel through top of the wall openings in your attic. If you use rat poison or a squirrel trap to try to get rid of squirrels in the attic, then you could be smelling dead, baby squirrels rotting in your attic or walls for weeks. And if you use a rat poison to kill the squirrels, the squirrel will often retreat to its nest in your attic to die and you will be smelling its rotting body for weeks. Often interior walls have to be cut into to remove the dead squirrels. An attic squirrel may nest under attic flooring and the flooring will have to be removed to remove the dead squirrel in the attic. AND PLEASE KEEP IN MIND, THAT IF YOU HEAR SQUIRRELS IN YOUR ATTIC THROUGHOUT THE YEAR, YOU MOST LIKELY HAVE 4 TO 6 BABIES PER EACH MOTHER SQUIRREL IN THE ATTIC 40-50% OF THE YEAR.  A MOTHER SQUIRREL CAUGHT IN A SQUIRREL TRAP, WHETHER SNAP TRAP OR LIVE TRAPPED, AND CARRIED AWAY - OR - A POISONED SQUIRREL - OR - A SQUIRREL SHOT WITH A PELLET GUN - COULD, 40% TO 50% OF THE YEAR, RESULT IN DEAD YOUNG SQUIRRELS IN YOUR ATTIC OR INTERIOR HOUSE WALLS LEFT TO DECAY AND SMELL.

    Rat traps used as squirrel traps. Rat traps are designed for rats - not for squirrels in attics! I am speaking of the snap trap variety of rat traps. I have seen an attic squirrel that was trapped in one of these rat traps and it did not kill the squirrel. The rat trap used as a squirrel trap was placed in an attic by a well meaning husband trying to get rid of his squirrels in the attic. He had placed about a dozen rat traps in a 2,000 square foot attic space. The traps had been up in the attic for seven years! A squirrel ran past one and tripped the rat trap trigger.  The rat trap snapped shut on the attic squirrel's foot. Where do you think this injured squirrel with a rat trap attached to its broke leg ran to? It ran to a interior house wall where its nest was. There's no place like home. The squirrel managed to force its broken leg through the wall opening in the attic with the rat trap still attached. But as it tried to leave the interior wall space to go back up into the attic the rat trap used as a squirrel trap became stuck and so was the injured squirrel. Unfortunately the squirrel had to be put down.

    If you use a rat trap as a squirrel trap the squirrel will usually not face an immediate death being as the rat traps are not designed to be used as a squirrel trap. The squirrel will definitely suffer and if it is able to move it will often retreat to its squirrel nest in your attic to die and rot and smell.

    If you use a rat poison to poison an attic squirrel, besides the risk of it or its young dying in your attic or home's wall, is the risk of a sickened or dead family pet.

    Every year there a hundreds of cases of secondary poisonings from a dog or cat chewing on or partially ingesting poisoned rat, mouse or squirrel. If a dog or cat finds a dead rodent - and they can smell them out, they find what to them is a chew toy and/or an extra meal. As they carry around the dead rodent in their mouths, as some kind of trophy, they are ingesting the very poisons that killed the rat. At least, your pet could get sick and sometimes they die. This death will occur some times because there is often, over time, more than one dead rat or squirrel that they find and the poisons accumulate in the pet's blood stream until it becomes sick and dies, or at least runs up a considerable veterinary bill.

    The scent glands of squirrels are located in their feet. As they run they leave little scent road maps for other squirrels to follow. The pheromones in rodent urine (squirrels are rodents) can last up to two years. Tree squirrels love to live in attics. It’s warmer, drier and safer from predators. Unfortunately most attics are not equipped with squirrel toilets. But this is not a problem for the squirrels - they will just urinate and defecate all over the attic. And I do mean all over. It is amazing to see an attic where squirrels have been residing. Raisin sized dung all over the place and matted down insulation which is stained with and smells of urine. It is truly nasty – but not to the squirrels. The urine and glands in the squirrels’ feet leave pheromone trails which are like a welcome mat or “attic for rent” sign for future squirrels. This is why squirrel trapping, poisoning, or house sealing has to be done over and over and over by homeowners at great cost each time and most definitely accumulatively. I know from experience and so does my pocketbook.

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    Squirrels in the loft means wire damage:

    Did you know that 25% of house fires of "unknown cause" are attributed to Loft Squirrels, Roof Rats, Norway Rats and Mice chewing on wires?

     

    Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Grey Squirrel gnawing The term “rodent” comes from the Latin verb rodere (to gnaw). Rodents, such as Squirrels, are constantly gnawing on wood, wiring or whatever they can get their teeth on because their teeth are continually growing. For instance, the grey squirrel’s front teeth grow a half a foot in length each year. Rodents, such as Norway Rats, Roof Rats, Mice and Squirrels, have to chew and gnaw constantly to keep their teeth’s length in check otherwise their teeth would grow too long - rendering the squirrel in your loft unable to eat and thus starve to death.

    As a result of this constant need to gnaw twenty-five percent of fires of “unknown cause” are attributed to rodents, such as Roof Rats, Squirrels in loft and Mice, chewing on electrical wires. A failure to get rid of squirrels in loft could lead to your house catching fire in the middle of the night.

     

     

     

     

    Squirrels in the Loft Wire Damage and House Fires

    Get Rid Squirrels Loft - Loft Fires According to the USA Fire Administration, a house fire occurs every 79 seconds. There are usually about 50,000 – 60,000 residential fires of “unknown cause” each year in the US. Officials at the Department of Homeland Security estimate that they receive reports from fire departments on only half of the actual number of fires that occur each year. This means that the number of fires of “unknown cause” each year could be double the 50 to 60 thousand average. That’s possibly up to 120,000 fires of “unknown cause” each year in the US. And remember that 25% of these fires are attributed to Squirrels in the attic, Roof Rats and Mice chewing on attic wiring. Therefore, based on government statistics and statements made by government authorities, the number of residential fires caused by the failure to get rid of Attic Squirrels, Roof Rats, Norway Rats and Mice are approximately 15,000 fires annually and could be as high as 30,000 fires. If you have rodents, such as squirrels, in your loft – you probably have wire damage too.

    Click here to see photos of how a lack of Squirrels in the Loft Control led to wire damage in a loft.

     

     

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