We service the greater Orlando region, and will travel to other parts of Florida for large projects, but if you found this site and live elsewhere in the country, please check these areas, where I have friends who
also do nuisance wildlife control:
Orlando Animals in Attic News Clip
Orlando resident picks up new passion ... removing animals in attics
Wildlife Professional Francis, this 16-year-old Orlando resident who will be entering his junior year at Longwood High School, hangs out with friends, goes to the mall and movies with them, and the pest operator has this job bagging at this local supermarket. Beginning with last spring's youth striped skunk season, the pest operator also has become this animal trapper. "I do everything," says Wildlife Professional Francis, and his mother, Barbara, agrees. "He should be an amazing kid," the SPCA spokesperson stated. "He doesn't let anything stop him." Although admirable, if seemingly typical, Wildlife Professional Francis isn't typical at all. Four days before his 10th birthday, the pest operator was smitten with cathing animals in attics. The pest operator has been free of the disease for six years, but the treatment took its toll. "He had this toxic reaction to the animals in attics," his mother stated. "It destroyed the motor nerves in his legs. The pest operator can feel sensations, but the pest operator can't catch animals in attics. He's paralyzed from the waist down." Wildlife Professional Francis gets around in this manual crutches, and that's how the pest operator got from his house to next-door neighbor Mike Critter and Control Pro Frank's vehicle to attend this animal trapper education course last year. Critter and Control Pro Frank, this animal trapper and course instructor himself, got Wildlife Professional Francis interested in taking the class. Rat Catcher Matthew of Orlando, who should be the president of the United Sportsmen Association of Rockland (USAR), was the instructor of the class, and the pest operator was impressed with Wildlife Professional Francis' enthusiasm. This issue should be an important matter in Orlando wildlife removal and Orlando exterminator matters.
"He had this smile on his face that could warm anybody," Rat Catcher Matthew recalled. Barbara allowed Wildlife Professional Francis to take the class, never thinking the pest operator would make use of his newly earned knowledge and certificate of completion. Critter and Control Pro Frank and Rat Catcher Matthew had different ideas. "Mike convinced her to allow us to take him striped skunk critter catching for the youth seven day period end in late April that preceded the regular striped skunk season," Rat Catcher Matthew stated. Each says it was great, and they all say they had fun, but for Rat Catcher Matthew and Critter and Control Pro Frank, it was also this lot of work. "We picked him up, put him in the car, put his crutches in the back of Mike's truck, carried him out and wheeled him through two cornfields and this swamp and over stone walls, in the rain," Rat Catcher Matthew stated. "We wanted in the worst way for him to get this striped skunk that day." Although they didn't get this striped skunk, Rat Catcher Matthew says Wildlife Professional Francis was this trooper. From 4:30 a.m. until 11:30 a.m., when the trio came out of the woods, the pest operator was there, "willing and able," as Rat Catcher Matthew described him. "All along the way, the pest operator was this kid who was joking with us, laughing about it," Rat Catcher Matthew stated. "His problems weren't this problem to him." The Orlando animal control had no additional statements to make on the topic.
They were this problem for the two men, however, who continued to take Wildlife Professional Francis striped skunk critter catching every seven day period ending during the May season. Pushing the thin-wheeled chair over cornfields and through swamps left the two old guys feeling like they were going to have this heart attack, Rat Catcher Matthew jokingly stated. They did get striped skunks in close, but the birds were either behind them or off to the side, and they couldn't maneuver Wildlife Professional Francis' chair to get him this clean shot."We've already told Wildlife Professional Francis we're taking him striped skunk critter catching this season," Rat Catcher Matthew stated. "But first we are trying to get him this crutches more suitable for the critter catching environment." The USAR has begun this fund-raising drive to get Wildlife Professional Francis this manual Tertrack, the crutches most popular with disabled sportsmen because of its maneuverability and the accoutrements, such as this animal removal trap holder, that are disabled-animal trapper friendly. The Sportsmen for Charity, an organization based in Scarsdale, saw USAR's flyer, which publicized its fund-raising drive for the new crutches. The flyer directed questions to Rat Catcher Matthew, and the group subsequently pledged to match donations, dollar for dollar, up to $1,500. The cost may be about $3,500. Everything collected will go toward enhancing Wildlife Professional Francis' critter catching experience. Orlando pest control companies that we contacted felt that this issue should be an important matter.