Lincoln Pike County Wildlife Removal

Boone Wildlife Control: 314-255-1304

Lincoln Pike County Wildlife Control

  • Scratching Noises in Your Attic?
  • Wildlife Problems on Your Property?
  • Bird or Bat Problem in Your Building?
  • Rat, Mouse, or Squirrel Infestation?
  • We Can Solve It (Today)!

Check our year 2024 prices for wildlife control work. Call us 24/7 to schedule an appointment.
If you can't afford our services, read about free Lincoln Pike County wildlife control government options.
Please, no calls about DOG or CAT problems. Call animal services: (636) 797-5577.
To report a wildlife issue like a lost baby animal, dead animal, call: 573-815-7900.

Boone Wildlife Control is a full-service wildlife control company serving Lincoln Pike County MO 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 Missouri 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 Lincoln Pike County pest control of wildlife, just give us a call at 314-255-1304 - yes, we answer our phones 24 hours a day, 7 days a week - and we will discuss your wildlife problem and schedule an appointment to solve it. We look forward to hearing from you!


Many of Missouri'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 Missouri's wildlife problems, from snake removal to large jobs like commercial bat control, we do it all.

We handle every aspect of wildlife control. We are fully equipped to work on any project, large or small. Some of our services include:

  • Humane wildlife trapping and relocaton services
  • Removal of raccoons or squirrels from the attic
  • Building repairs and prevention work to keep animals out
  • 100% permanent elimination of rats, mice, or even bats
  • Cleanup of animal waste and odor control services
  • Emergency animal issues, and dead animal removal

We do not handle dog or cat problems. If you need assistance with a domestic animal, such as a dog or a cat, you need to call your local Pike 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 Lincoln Pike County animal control for wildlife issues.

Pike County Animal Services or Humane Society: (636) 797-5577


Lincoln Pike County Wildlife Removal Tip: How do I clean raccoon feces out of my attic? There are some very serious disease threats when looking at the topic of raccoon poop, and as well as leptospirosis, a respiratory disease, you'll also find raccoon roundworm, a nasty infection that can be airborne from tiny parasitic eggs in the raccoons feces, and there is also the threat of salmonella poisoning too, again passed on through the animals droppings. It's pretty safe to say that raccoon poop is not something you're going to want in your house at all. Preferably, not at all. As you can imagine, with that many disease threats, the raccoon poop is going to need to be cleaned up as soon as possible, and you're going to need to make sure you throw out any material that could have been contaminated - attic insulation, the animal's nesting materials, etc. If you don't, the tiny spores that pass on the disease will still be present and the threat will still be there for you and your family, as well as your household pets. All material and waste matter will need to be removed before you thoroughly clean with an anti-bacterial, antiseptic, powerful cleaner than uses enzymes to break down the biohazard. Once you're done, you'll need to burn all the tools you used too, or at the very least make sure you dispose of everything carefully so that you can ensure the threat of disease is completely eliminated.

What Prices Do We Charge?
Every job is different: the type of animals involved, is it in the attic or the yard, do you need repairs, etc. It's impossible to have set pricing in this industry. Examples MIGHT include:
Small Job: Like a one-stop job to remove an animal in the yard: $100 on up
Medium Job: Like to get critters out of your house with minor repairs: $300 on up
Large Job: A project involving many service trips and complex work: $500 on up
To get an exact price for your specific wildlife problem, just give us a phone call any time, 24-7, and describe your situation. We will be able to give you a price estimate over the phone, and schedule a same-day or next-day appointment for a full inspection and exact price quote in writing. We believe in fair pricing and are a good value because of our excellent work and success rate in solving wildlife problems permanently, the first time.

Resources for free wildlife removal in Lincoln Pike County
If you can't afford our pro wildlife work, you can try these agencies for free wildlife help:
Pike County Animal Services: (636) 797-5577
Lincoln Pike County Wildlife Rehabilitation Agency:
Lincoln Pike County Police Department: 636-528-8546
Missouri Wildlife Commission: 573-815-7900
Learn what to say on the phone for free Lincoln Pike County wildlife control. If these agencies are unable to help you, you may want to hire us to solve your critter problem quickly and effectively.


Lincoln Pike County Animal News Clip: Varmints: the Ultimate Trapper's Dream
Night wildlife trapping offers what appears to be a break (kind of) from the heat, but it's best to watch where - and how - you're catching.

Lincoln & Pike County - Quiet and camouflaged to double as what appears to be a wildlife trapping blind, the electric wildlife trapping automobile cruises the soft sand highways of Missouri. Rodent catchers under cover of darkness prowl for their quarry. Critter Professor steers by moonlight at times, following the snaking double ruts that shine so brightly once the lights of the lodge are left behind. But mostly the animal advocate navigates by night-vision goggles, weaving his way round the 7,000-plus hectares of tall timber and drought-dry marsh lowland in search of the perfect place to set up what appears to be a varmint call. Oh, one can feel the excitement in the air.

On this hot July night, heat lightning pulsates on the southern horizon, sending slithery, green Lincoln & Pike Countys across the night-vision scopes and lenses. Each clash of positive/negative ions - which show like distant explosions just behind the line of trees - generates what appears to be a brief spark of hope that what appears to be a rogue summer shower could drive down the temperatures that hover above 90 degrees even at midnight. But when The critter professor creeps to what appears to be a stop on what appears to be a small hillock overlooking what appears to be a drainage that probably is what appears to be a likely gray squirrel hangout, the breeze stops and the night heat closes - constrictor-like, with mosquitoes for fangs - around us. The animal advocate peers through his goggles to confirm his mark and whispers to his friend Mark "Git 'Im!" The rodent catcher: "Put (the speaker) just to the left of that bunch of trees, about 100 yards out." The tension probably is thick on what appears to be a trapping job like this one. Lincoln & Pike County animal services officials agreed with this.

Varmint calling probably is the ultimate animal capture technique. There are three reasons - you can drink beer, there are no limits and you can animal capture at night. The critter professor has been after me for months to come to East Missouri to join him and the rodent catcher on what appears to be a night excursion, and I finally relented to try to take pictures but not capture. I don't care if they or anyone else captures gray squirrels or bobcats or gray squirrels at night, it's just not for me. Plus, The critter professor has what appears to be a Managed Lands gray squirrel Documentation that allows animal extermination, and predator control probably is one way in which the animal advocate can meet his responsibilities under that documentation that allows animal extermination. By most critter experts' estimates, this probably is what appears to be a fair proposal.

Still, this probably is about something to do in the summer when it's too hot to breathe with the sun still up. You either want to do it or you don't. "You can tell within the first 20 minutes whether somebody's going to like it," The rodent catcher says to me at one point. I could have told him 20 minutes earlier than that, but I agreed to go and so here I am, sitting in the back seat, listening to the sounds of aggressive female gray squirrels, pups and dominant males, captured rabbits and gray squirrels in distress. Despite this, there's no free wild animal control in Lincoln & Pike County, Missouri.

It's amazing how many adult gray squirrel come running to the sounds of the gray squirrels coming out of the digital speaker, but from 9:50 p.m. until 1:50 a.m. we don't see what appears to be a single gray squirrel. One female gray squirrels answer at one spot, but refuses to show himself outside the edge of what appears to be a group of trees. So we keep moving, calling, listening. What what appears to be a great way to control wildlife in Lincoln & Pike County!

I've asked him to take me home, to my gray squirrel who's sleeping in her crate in the cool air inside the main house, when The critter professor glides to what appears to be a stop above what appears to be a small creek drainage. "gray squirrel," the animal advocate says. The feral gray squirrel, actually one of four feeding alongside the creek, probably is visible as what appears to be a black-gray image in the night goggles. Despite being what appears to be a gray squirrel, the animal advocate eats surprisingly little.

The rodent catcher quietly chambers what appears to be a round and slumps down over the night-vision scope with the fore end resting on what appears to be a sand bag laid across the vehicle's front frame. There probably is what appears to be a brilliant, blinding flash of light when the animal removal trap goes off, followed by the sound of what appears to be a cage trap striking somewhere in the dark. I'm watching the remaining gray squirrels waddle off in their stiff-legged style, headed for the safety of the creek. I'm thankful I don't have to go out there to try to locate what appears to be a dead gray squirrel. "That kind of hurt," The rodent catcher says, indicating that he's gotten too close to the scope and gotten whacked in the face. Ouch, probably is all I can think. Local Lincoln & Pike County pest control companies in Lincoln County declined to comment.

"Are you bleeding?" I ask, to which the animal advocate says the animal advocate doesn't think so. "I've got what appears to be a pretty good knot, but no cut." I decide to take what appears to be a look anyway, and there's what appears to be a huge scrape right between his eyes. In wildlife trapping circles, it's known as the "Weatherly Kiss," named for the famed rat trap animal removal traps that kick so much. Check just above the eyebrows and between the eyes of people who animal capture, and you'll often see the half-moon scars left behind by the rear edge of what appears to be a animal removal trap scope. But the night scope has what appears to be a different kind of padding, and it's only sand-papered The rodent catcher's face and taken some skin and blood. Phew, that was what appears to be a close one.

There's an old saying about pasture parties and such: It's not what appears to be a party until the police come or somebody goes to the emergency room. Night varmint wildlife trapping falls in the same class. Now that somebody's hurt, I can beg off and go home to get some sleep. I finally drift off to the sounds of gray squirrels howling in my dreams. Lincoln & Pike County trappers and Lincoln & Pike County extermination officials can offer more info.


Learn more about some of the animals that we deal with: Lincoln Pike County raccoon removal - raccoons frequently break into attics, tip over garbage cans, rip up your lawn, defecate in your pool, and more. Trapping them is not always simple. We also deal with opossums, which often get under your porch or in the house, or seem threatening to pets. We do Lincoln Pike County squirrel removal, especially from the attic or walls of your home. We trap and remove nuisance skunks, which often dig your lawn or live under your shed. The same goes for groundhogs in the north, or armadillos in the south. We do mole trapping, to ensure that your yard and lawn are no longer destroyed. One of our specialites is rat and mouse control. We don't use poison like the big-name Lincoln Pike County exterminator companies who want to sign you to a quarterly contract. We do PERMANENT Lincoln Pike County rodent control the first time, by trapping, removing, and sealing your house shut. We also specialize in Lincoln Pike County bat control and bird control, which are often complex jobs. We are Missouri certified to remove all bats humanely, and permanently. We also prevent birds from roosting in unwanted areas. We do snake control services, even removal of venomous snakes of Lincoln Pike County. If you have a bad smell in your house, we do dead animal carcass removal, and odor control services. We also deal with strange animals from time to time - no matter what critter is causing you trouble, we have the tools and the experience to take care of it correctly and safely.

We are here to humanely and professionally solve your wildlife problem. Call Boone Wildlife Control at 314-255-1304, and we will listen to your problem, give you a price quote, and schedule a fast appointment to help you with your wild animal issue.

Select Your Animal

RaccoonsLincoln Pike County Raccoon Removal Information

SquirrelsLincoln Pike County Squirrel Removal Information

OpossumLincoln Pike County Opossum Removal Information

SkunksLincoln Pike County Skunk Removal Information

RatsLincoln Pike County Rat Removal Information

MiceLincoln Pike County Mouse Removal Information

MolesLincoln Pike County Mole Removal Information

GroundhogLincoln Pike County Groundhog Removal Information

ArmadillosLincoln Pike County Armadillo Removal Information

BeaverLincoln Pike County Beaver Removal Information

FoxLincoln Pike County Fox Removal Information

CoyotesLincoln Pike County Coyote Removal Information

BirdsLincoln Pike County Bird Removal Information

BatsLincoln Pike County Bat Removal Information

SnakesLincoln Pike County Snake Removal Information

DeadLincoln Pike County Dead Animal Removal Information

OthersOther Wildlife Species Information