Fields, ditches, animals, and older homes — pest plans built for how the South Valley actually works.
The South Valley is working land — chile rows and alfalfa patches, older family homes on big lots, animal pens, and the ditch system tying it all together. That mix feeds people and, unavoidably, feeds pests: rodents follow the grain and the harvest, flies follow the animals, and roaches follow the water.
When fields get cut or the nights turn cold, the mice that lived in them move — into the nearest shed, pump house, or kitchen wall. Homes near pens and coops see fly and flea pressure a Heights subdivision never will. And the valley’s older homes, like their North Valley cousins, carry decades of settling gaps and swamp-cooler penetrations that work like open doors.
The fix respects how these properties work: tamper-resistant bait stations where dogs and chickens roam, exclusion on the outbuildings that matter, colony baiting instead of spray-and- pray, and honest talk about what a one-time visit can and can’t do on a working lot. Every job starts with a free inspection & estimate, the crew is licensed by the State of New Mexico and fully insured, and services are fully guaranteed.
Call, say what you’re seeing and whether animals are on the property, and the plan gets built around that — not around a script.
Yes — the South Valley is inside the regular Albuquerque metro service area, from the ditch neighborhoods out to the larger lots. Call (505) 555-0102, describe the property, and scheduling gets set on that call with a free inspection & estimate.
If you’re near fields or ditch banks, the mice that spent summer outside move to warmth when the nights cool — and again when nearby fields get cut. Trapping knocks the population down, but the lasting fix is exclusion: sealing the pencil-width gaps, cooler lines, and door sweeps they use to get in.
Yes, when it’s done right: bait lives inside tamper-resistant stations animals can’t open, trap placement accounts for where they roam, and the broader plan uses pet-friendly options and methods that minimize pesticide use. Tell the technician everything that lives on the lot when you call.
American roaches ride the drains and thrive wherever irrigation keeps ground moist — which is most of the valley. Treatment hits the drains, the moisture source, and the entry points. The one on the tile is a symptom, not the problem.
Flea and tick treatment covers the yard zones where they wait — shaded edges, under porches, around pens — alongside sanitation guidance that does more for flies than any spray. It’s honest scope: treatment plus the housekeeping that keeps it working.
Skunk. Don’t seal anything yet — closing the access with the animal (or babies) still under there makes it worse. The sequence is: confirm it’s out or remove it humanely, then close the den site with skirting and screening so it stays closed.
On working lots with fields and ditches nearby, pressure is seasonal and repeating — recurring plans (bi-monthly through annual) usually beat emergency one-offs. If your problem is genuinely one-and-done, that’s what you’ll be told. Services are fully guaranteed either way, and service agreement plans include free re-treats.
Yes — residential, multi-unit properties, and commercial are all covered, including the shops and small commercial buildings along the valley corridors.
Describe what you’re seeing and get a free inspection & estimate. No pressure, no obligation.
(505) 555-0102