Wasps’ Nests Destroyed in Bolton £32.00

May 6, 2009 · Posted in Uncategorized · Comment 

Wasps’ Nests Destroyed in Bolton £32.00

Wasps’ Nests Destroyed in Bolton £32.00 – Bolton Pest Control destroy wasps’ nests in the Bolton area for a fixed fee of £32.00. We work seven days per week and do not charge exra for weekend or evening calls. Call us now on 01204 689361.

Wasps' Nests Destroyed in Bolton £29.50

Wasps' Nests Destroyed in Bolton £29.50

The annoying wasp season is almost with us once more, what would summer be without our old friends the wasps to pester us as we enjoy our evening barbeques?

The biology of the wasp means they are rarely seen much before July as until then only the wasp queen is in the nest.

In late March or early April the over-wintering queens leave their hibernating sites to find nesting places which could be in a hole in the ground, a hollow tree or artificial structures such as chimneys eaves, lofts and attics, garden sheds etc.

The new queen starts to construct her nest with a papery material that she makes by chewing small pieces of wood mixed with saliva; this is called Wasp paper.

She will raise the first few workers by herself and those workers will then carry on the building of the nest and feeding the immature Wasps to follow.

Nest building starts in earnest in June and will reach its maximum in size in September, when 5 – 30,000 workers may be in the nest. These workers will gather food up to 400 metres from the nest. The size of wasp colonies will vary from year to year, the severity of the previous winter is probably the main factor.

In the mid-September the newly produced queens mate and leave the nest to hibernate, the rest of the nest dies out and the nest is never used again.

Individuals react differently to being stung by wasps; some are hardly affected, while others endure considerable pain and discomfort and a few become seriously allergic to being stung, which in some cases results in sudden death due to anaphylactic shock.
Control
It is advisable to let a professional Pest Controller deal with a Wasps’ nest for the reasons stated above. An insecticide will be injected into the entrance to the nest. Returning wasps will carry the insecticide into the centre of the nest and within a few hours all wasps should be dead.

It is foolish to allow a wasps’ nest to go full term as the resultant queens produced by the nest will invariably nest nearby in the following spring resulting in many more nests the following year. For this reason several nests are often found clustered together in an area a locality.

Wasps’ Nests Destroyed in Bolton £3250

Squirrel Infestations In Bolton, Lancashire

March 30, 2009 · Posted in Uncategorized · Comment 

Squirrel Infestations In Bolton, Lancashire


Squirrel Infestations In Bolton, Lancashire –
The squirrel population in  North West England has rocketed over the last 20 years to the extent that they are now a major pest species.Grey Squirrel
The grey squirrels which we see in our gardens (Sciurus carolinensis) are not native to the U.K., having been brought here less than 200 years ago from America.
Like many members of the Sciuridae family, the Grey Squirrel is a hoarder; it hoards food in numerous small caches for subsequent recovery. Some hoards, especially those made near the source of a sudden surplus of food.
Other stores are more permanent and are not used until many months later. It has been observed that each squirrel makes several thousand of these caches each season. The squirrels have very accurate spatial memory for the locations of these hoards, and use distant and nearby landmarks to retrieve them. Smell is used once the squirrel is within a few centimetres of the cache.
The nest of the squirrel is called a dray (or drey) and it is usual for the female to have two litters per year, each of two to four young..
They are minor problems, digging up bulbs and taking food intended for birds but can become major pests when they enter our houses.
It is increasingly common for pest controllers to call out to homes where a dray has been built in a loft or attic space.
Squirrels are rodents and as such have teeth which never stop growing; the word rodent comes from the Latin ‘rodere’ meaning ‘to gnaw’ and this they do extremely well.
It is rare to enter a roof space where a dray has been made and find that they have not damaged electrical wiring, indeed it is estimated that up to 40% percent of fires without an obviously attributable cause may be started by rodents chewing on the wiring.
Unfortunately they can also chew through water-pipes, especially with the recent trend towards plastic piping.
As if that isn’t enough, most household insurance policies specifically exclude damage caused by rodents so if a squirrel floods your house by chewing through a water pipe in the attic you may find yourself without insurance.
Dealing with squirrels requires a professional, not least in as much as the law regarding squirrels restricts your options. You cannot simply buy a packet of rat poison from your local hardware and deal with them that way as you would be committing a criminal offence.
Furthermore you cannot trap them and relocate them some distance away, quite apart from the fact that removing a squirrel from the area of its food caches would probably condemn it to death by starvation, it is also a criminal offence under the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981 which makes it illegal to release a grey squirrel in Britain.
That applies also to rescuing, and releasing injured squirrels.
In most cases trapping is the the only option and this must be done in a specified manner with routine, timed inspections of the traps.
Trapped squirrels should be then humanely dispatched.

That concludes this article entitled – Squirrel Infestations In Bolton, Lancashire

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