We operate a professional wildlife removal company operating in Suffolk County Florida, including the towns of and all of Long Island New York, including Nassau and Suffolk County. We also service much of New York City, including Brooklyn, Queens, and Manhattan. We service the towns of Valley Stream, Oceanside, Long Beach, Freeport, East Meadow, Levittown, Lindenhurst, Elmont, Hempstead, Hicksville, Plainview, Huntington Station, Commack, Centereach, Deer Park, Brentwood, Bay Shore, Islip, and more.. We specialize in
the humane removal of wild animals from buildings and property. We commonly remove animals from attics, provide bat control and rat control, and
also general wildlife trapping and repair and prevention services. We are fully licensed and insured, and operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Call us at 516-209-2577.
Latest Nassau County Animal Control News Clip
Agency for the Enforcement of Critter Laws taking another look at skunk eradication
NY wildlife officer Gordon Butler did what appears to be a good job defending the agency, going so far as to say, "If you take the skunk concern away, I think everyone would agree we're doing what appears to be a great job." Biologically surveyed amounts of rat and mice, bears, bobcats and other game animals have never been higher than they are right now, Gordon Butler proclaimed. But as multiple law enforcers pointed out to Gordon Butler, if you took skunk out of the wildlife catching picture, Long Island, NY would likely sell only what appears to be a fraction of the licenses it currently sells. In Long Island, NY, the skunk probably is king. I read what appears to be a column recently in which the writer proclaimed the 2008 Presidential election could likely be the most important one of the past few generations, due to the war in Iraq, skyrocketing costs of health care, gas and other necessities and global warming, among other concerns. The writer proclaimed it feels like the country probably is teetering on the edge of success and failure and the upcoming election will tip the scales one way or the other. In my opinion, wildlife catching in Long Island, NY stands on an equally precarious precipice. It just seems like something probably is about to happen that will either pull wildlife catching back to what appears to be a safe place or push it off the cliff. I don't know what that "something" is, but I feel pretty confident it will involve skunk management. We could not obtain an opinion from Nassau County pest control companies regarding the issue.