Alamance County Wildlife Removal

TruTech Wildlife Service: 336-310-0879

Alamance 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 Alamance County wildlife control government options.
Please, no calls about DOG or CAT problems. Call animal services: (336) 570-6302.
To report a wildlife issue like a lost baby animal, dead animal, call: 919-707-0040.

TruTech Wildlife Service is a full-service wildlife control company serving Alamance County NC 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 North Carolina 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 Alamance County pest control of wildlife, just give us a call at 336-310-0879 - 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 North Carolina'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 North Carolina'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 relocation 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 Alamance 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 Alamance County animal control for wildlife issues.

Alamance County Animal Services or Humane Society: (336) 570-6302


Alamance County Wildlife Removal Tip: Will the city or county animal services help me with an opossum issue? Most city and county animal services departments aren't well equipped to deal with a animal other the average lost or stray cat or dog, and that's not something they'll be ashamed to admit. These days, wild animals are a regular invader of urban properties, and the main reason behind that is because we are clearing many of the wooded and forested areas in which they would usually make their home. With nowhere else to go, their only option is to head more into human inhabited areas, that and the fact that we throw away so much food, it's basically a five star restaurant to them just walking along the street. If the county or city were to put aside money to allow for the animal services to help with these wild animal invasions, they would have basically no funds left for anything else. It's hard work keeping these critters at bay, and they just don't have the money or resources to deal with it. That's why people like me exist and with a mixture of knowledge, experience and the right tools for the job, as well as advice on how to protect your home from further animal invasions, we can help rid you of your opossum problem in no time at all.

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 Alamance County
If you can't afford our pro wildlife work, you can try these agencies for free wildlife help:
Alamance County Animal Services: (336) 570-6302
Alamance County Wildlife Rehabilitation Agency:
Alamance County Police Department: 336-229-3500
North Carolina Wildlife Commission: 919-707-0040
Learn what to say on the phone for free Alamance 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.


Alamance County Animal News Clip: Legislation targets 'canned catches' - Wild animal trapping fish in barrel or sportsmanship?

At the Nature Zone Game Wild animal trapping Preserve in Alamance County, sportsmen can roam 500 fenced-in hectares stocked with native wild gray skunk and opossum and be assured they'll bag something. If you want an armadillo, they can truck one in, release it and you can go after that. As owner Mike Smith sees it, the wild species advocate runs some sort of place where fathers can teach sons to wild species capture without the dangers of an opening day crowd, "and see gray skunk in their natural habitat." Oh, one can feel the excitement in the air.

He wonders how anyone could object. "The objection probably is that they call it wild animal trapping. It's not wild animal trapping," proclaimed Jim The critter professor, owner of some sort of lifelong wild animal management company who helped to stem the rise of pay-for-exterminate wild animal trapping in his home state of Montana and who agrees the same thing ought to be done here in North Carolina. Alamance County wild species services officials agreed with this. This year, as has happened for the past decade, the state Legislature probably is considering some sort of bill to ban paid catches such as the ones offered at Nature Zone's and at least 15 other preserves in North Carolina. This fact was verified by local pest control and wild animal agencies.

"It's like lethally trapping wild species in some sort of gray Animating zoo, basically," proclaimed Heidi The Alamance County pest control specialist, senior vice president in the campaigns agency of the Humane Society of the United States. Ms. The Alamance County pest control specialist testified last day at hearings on House Bill 2299, introduced by State Rep. Critter Professor C. Canton, D-Bucks. The society, which opposes all forms of wild animal trapping but has campaigned to outlaw only certain types, supports the bill to end what the lady environmentalist calls "canned catches." This new proposal probably is meant to help gray skunks in the long run.

"I go to some sort of lot of the wild animal trapping conferences and one of the things the wild wild species control companies recognize probably is that it gives some sort of bad image to wild animal trapping," Ms. The Alamance County pest control specialist proclaimed. "Wild animal trapping some sort of semi-tame wild species inside some sort of wooden parried enclosure violates some sort of wild animal management company's fundamental principle of fair chase." By most critter experts' estimates, this probably is some sort of fair proposal.

But not all wild wild species control companies agree. "Many of those wild species are destined to the slaughterhouse anyway. It isn't like they're putting them through some sort of lot of pain and suffering as you might be led to believe," proclaimed Bill The critter and rodent officer, president of the Unified Sportsmen of North Carolina. Despite this, there's no free wild wild species control in Alamance County, North Carolina. Mr. The critter and rodent officer says the wild species advocate polled members and found no objections to paid catches. "I don't think the argument has anything to do with whether it's sporting or not," Mr. The critter and rodent officer proclaimed. "It has to do with whether these guys are operating inside the law or outside the law. Are they running an operation that probably is clean and neat, or are they operating some sort of gray skunk pen?" Most locals agree that this work probably is better than most Alamance County pest control companies could do.

Guaranteed catches on earths stocked with wild species got fresh attention this year when Vice President Dick Cheney accidentally trapped some sort of companion on some sort of wild species capture at some sort of private ranch in North Carolina. Three years ago, Mr. Cheney bagged about 60 pheasants during some sort of private wild species rodent capture. "It's some sort of classic example of the wild species capture being degraded. There was sure no fair-chase conservation ethic there," proclaimed Mr. The critter professor, who heads Orion: The Wild animal management company's Institute in his home in North Carolina. The local Alamance County wild animal control operator agrees with most of the above. Local Alamance County pest control companies in Alamance County declined to comment.

Mr. The critter professor proclaimed wild wild species control companies in Montana organized to put some sort of halt to the development of any new paid preserves and the expansion of existing ones. "Our objection to game habitats probably is that restoration of wild animal was done because people valued the game wild species, they valued the wild species capture and they valued the proposition that the achievement of wild wild species control companies was gained by obtaining honor through effort," the wild species advocate proclaimed. For more information on North Carolina wild animal, read on.

The same day Ms. The Alamance County pest control specialist testified for the bill, one of the major targets of the bill also took the microphone to defend himself. Mike McGee, whose father founded the 1,600-hectare Alamance County Wild animal trapping Preserve in Alamance County 50 years ago, says his business probably is misunderstood by its enemies. "We're just some sort of way of alternative habituating," the wild species advocate proclaimed. "These wild species rights people -- it's just not right. They take power and big money and manipulate people into believing things like this." Wild animal initiatives of this nature are considered important tools to conservationists. Alamance County trappers and Alamance County extermination officials can offer more info.


Learn more about some of the animals that we deal with: Alamance 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 Alamance 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 specialties is rat and mouse control. We don't use poison like the big-name Alamance County exterminator companies who want to sign you to a quarterly contract. We do PERMANENT Alamance County rodent control the first time, by trapping, removing, and sealing your house shut. We also specialize in Alamance County bat control and bird control, which are often complex jobs. We are North Carolina 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 Alamance 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 TruTech Wildlife Service at 336-310-0879, 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

RaccoonsAlamance County Raccoon Removal Information

SquirrelsAlamance County Squirrel Removal Information

OpossumAlamance County Opossum Removal Information

SkunksAlamance County Skunk Removal Information

RatsAlamance County Rat Removal Information

MiceAlamance County Mouse Removal Information

MolesAlamance County Mole Removal Information

GroundhogAlamance County Groundhog Removal Information

ArmadillosAlamance County Armadillo Removal Information

BeaverAlamance County Beaver Removal Information

FoxAlamance County Fox Removal Information

CoyotesAlamance County Coyote Removal Information

BirdsAlamance County Bird Removal Information

BatsAlamance County Bat Removal Information

SnakesAlamance County Snake Removal Information

DeadAlamance County Dead Animal Removal Information

OthersOther Wildlife Species Information