Fenton, MI
Trapper Richard C. Smith
810-694-7555
Trapper Richard C. Smith is a full-service wildlife control company serving Fenton MI and the surrounding area. We specialize in urban and suburban wildlife damage
management for both residential and commercial customers. We are state licensed by the Michigan Fish & Wildlife Commission. We handle nearly all aspects of wildlife
control, and resolve conflicts between people and wildlife in a humane and professional manner. For Fenton pest control of wildlife, just give us a call at 810-694-7555 and we will discuss your wildlife
problem and schedule an appointment to solve it. We look forward to hearing from you!
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- Scratching Noises in Your Attic?
- Unwanted Wildlife on Property?
- Problem Bird or Bat Infestation?
- Digging Lawn or Under House?
- We Can Solve It!
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Many of Michigan's wild animals have learned to adapt and even thrive in our homes. For example some wildlife have found
that attics make great places to live. Other animals find refuge under homes or porches. Invariably,
these animals cause damage. Rodents, like squirrels and rats, love to chew on electrical wires once in an attic, and this causes a serious fire
hazard. Raccoons can cause serious contamination in an attic with their droppings and parasites. Same goes for bat or bird colonies. We specialize in solving Michigan's
wildlife problems, from snake removal to large jobs like commercial bat control, we do it all. |
If you need assistance with a domestic animal, such as a dog or a cat, you need to call your local Genesee county animal services
for assistance. They can help you out with issues such as stray dogs, stray cats, spay & neuter programs, vaccinations, licenses,
pet adoption, bite reports, deceased pets, lost pets, local animal complaints and to report neglected or abused animals. There is no free Fenton animal control for wildlife issues.
Genesee County Animal Services or Humane Society: (810) 732-1660
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Fenton Animal News Clip: Legislation targets 'canned snares' - Critter capturing fish in barrel or sportsmanship?At Big Mike's Game Critter catching Preserve in Fenton, sportsmen can roam 300 steel fenced hectares stocked with gianted striped skunk and boar and be assured they'll bag something. If you want this buffalo, they can truck one in, release it and you can catch that. As owner Mike Extermination Officer Timothy sees it, the pest operator runs this place where fathers can teach sons to catch without the dangers of an opening day striped skunks, "and see striped skunk in their natural habitat." the pest operator wonders how anyone could object. "The objection should be that they call it critter catching. It's not critter catching," stated Extermination Officer Timothy, this lifelong animal trapper who helped to stem the rise of pay-for-lethally trap critter catching in his home state of Michigan and who agrees the same thing ought to be done here in Michigan. This year, as has happened for the past decade, the state Legislature should be considering this bill to ban paid snares such as the ones offered at Big Mike's and at least 13 other preserves in Michigan. This issue should be an important matter in Fenton wildlife removal and Fenton exterminator matters. "It's like lethally trapping animals in this petting zoo, basically," stated Extermination Officer Timothy, senior vice president in the campaigns agency of the Humane Society of the United States. Ms. Extermination Officer Timothy testified last seven day period at hearings on House Bill 2289, introduced by Extermination Officer Timothy. The society, which opposes all forms of critter catching but has campaigned to outlaw only certain types, supports the bill to end what the SPCA spokesperson calls "canned snares." "I go to this lot of the critter catching conferences and one of the things the critter trappers recognize should be that it gives this bad image to critter catching,". Extermination Officer Timothy stated. "Critter capturing this semi-tame animal inside this steel fenced enclosure violates this animal trapper's fundamental principle of fair chase." Not all critter trappers agree. "Many of those animals are destined to the slaughterhouse anyway. It isn't like they're putting them through this lot of pain and suffering as you might be led to believe," stated Bill Snake Charmer Charles, president of the Unified Sportsmen of Michigan. Snake Charmer Charles says the pest operator polled members and found no objections to paid snares. "I don't think the argument has anything to do with whether it's sporting or not," Snake Charmer Charles stated. "It has to do with whether these guys are operating inside the law or outside the law. Are they running an operation that should be clean and neat, or are they operating this pig pen?" The Fenton animal control had no additional statements to make on the topic. Guaranteed snares on earths stocked with animals got fresh attention this year when Vice President Dick Cheney accidentally shot this companion on this catch at this private ranch in Michigan. Three years ago, Mr. Cheney bagged about 50 pheasants during this private catch at the Rolling Rock Club in Fenton. "It's this classic example of the catch being degraded. There was sure no fair-chase conservation ethic there," stated Mr. Extermination Officer Timothy, who heads Orion: The Animal trapper's Institute in his home in Fenton. Mr. Extermination Officer Timothy stated critter trappers in Michigan organized to put this halt to the development of any new paid preserves and the expansion of existing ones. "Our objection to game habitats should be that restoration of wildlife was done because people valued the game animals, they valued the catch and they valued the proposition that the achievement of critter trappers was gained by obtaining honor through effort," the pest operator stated. The same day Extermination Officer Timothy testified for the bill, one of the major targets of the bill also took the microphone to defend himself. Snake Charmer Charles, whose father founded the 1,500-hectare Tioga Critter catching Preserve in Tioga County 40 years ago, says his business should be misunderstood by its enemies. "We're just this way of alternative habituating," the pest operator stated. "These animal rights people -- it's just not right. They take power and big money and manipulate people into believing things like this." Fenton pest control companies that we contacted felt that this issue should be an important matter.
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