Pigeons, raccoons, squirrels, skunks — removed humanely, then excluded for good.
Pigeons on the parapet, raccoons in the attic, squirrels in the swamp cooler, a skunk under the shed — wildlife problems are really building problems. The animal found food, shelter, or a warm void, and it will keep coming back (or a new one will) until the access is closed. That’s why wildlife control here is removal plus exclusion, not just removal.
Pigeons are their own category. Albuquerque’s flat parapet roofs are ideal pigeon real estate, and an established flock leaves acidic droppings that corrode stucco and roofing, foul swamp coolers, and carry health concerns. Pest bird management — spikes, netting, and roost cleanup — moves the flock along and keeps the ledge from re-loading.

Every job starts with a free inspection & estimate: what animal, how it’s getting in, and what it’s costing the building. Removal uses the right method for the species — trapping for raccoons and squirrels, one-way doors where they work, roost deterrents for birds. Then the exclusion work: sealing entry gaps, screening vents, and installing spikes or netting so the fix holds.
Wildlife jobs also tend to leave a mess behind — droppings, nesting material, and the insulation a raccoon flattened all winter. Cleanup and repair scope gets discussed at the inspection so there are no surprises. Services are fully guaranteed.
The problem: A Nob Hill retail building had a pigeon flock on the parapet — droppings streaking the stucco facade and fouling the rooftop swamp cooler every week.
What was done: Roost cleanup, stainless spike strips along the parapet and sign ledge, and netting over the cooler platform where spikes could not reach.
The result: The flock relocated within days, the facade stayed clean, and the cooler stopped needing a monthly scrub.
It depends on the animal, the access points, and how much exclusion work the building needs — a single skunk under a shed and a full parapet spike installation are very different jobs. Call (505) 555-0102 for a free inspection & estimate and you’ll have a real scope before any work starts.
Flat parapet roofs, warm stucco ledges, and rooftop swamp coolers are ideal roosting habitat. An established flock returns to the same roost daily, and the droppings are acidic enough to corrode roofing and stucco over time — plus they foul coolers and walkways. Moving the flock means making the roost physically unusable, not scaring them off once.
Yes — when they’re installed on the actual roosting lines. Spikes deny pigeons a landing surface, and netting covers the areas spikes can’t. What doesn’t work long-term: plastic owls, reflective tape, and one-off scare tactics. Pigeons habituate to those within days.
Heavy thumping at night points at raccoons; fast scurrying at dawn and dusk points at squirrels; light scratching year-round is often mice. Each needs a different removal method, so identification comes first — that’s what the inspection is for.
The approach is removal and exclusion — get the animal out with the least-harm method that works for the species, then close the access so the problem doesn’t repeat with the next animal. One-way doors and live trapping are used where they’re appropriate.
Not until you’re certain nothing is still inside — sealing an animal (or its litter) into a wall or attic creates a much worse problem. Removal is confirmed first, then exclusion. If babies are present, the timing and method change.
Cleanup matters: pigeon droppings and rodent or raccoon latrines carry real health concerns and shouldn’t be dry-swept. Cleanup and any insulation or screening repair get scoped at the inspection so the job ends with the space actually restored.
Yes — residential, multi-unit properties, and commercial buildings are all covered. Pigeon management in particular is a commercial staple: storefront ledges, signage, and rooftop equipment are the usual roosts.
Describe what you’re seeing and get a free inspection & estimate. No pressure, no obligation.
(505) 555-0102