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How Do I Control Mice While Keeping My Pets and Kids Safe?

Child and Pet Safe Mouse Control

Mice are a threat to your family’s safety, and one that should be taken seriously. From property damage to food contamination to spreading disease wild mice in your home can cause a great many problems. But in getting rid of mice in your home, it’s very important to make sure that the cure is not worse than the disease, this goes doubly for families with children and pets. What can hurt a mouse can hurt your loved ones. Below are some tips for trapping mice without the use of materials that can harm your family. 

Are Mouse Traps A Good Option?

Traditional snap traps are one possible solution for safe trapping… if you can keep them where your kids and pets can’t get to them. Try placing traps in out-of-reach spots, like behind the fridge, under sinks, or behind the stove. Mice also love using spaces like basement sill plates and suspended ceilings, which are usually out of reach. You can also put traps inside boxes with small holes to keep them away from little hands or paws. If you want something ready-made for this, check out the Trap Rite Tunnel.

A lot of pest control companies are now using smart traps. For instance, Anticimex’s SMART Box can catch up to 40 mice or 7 rats without the need for toxic baits. It kills mice quickly and humanely, and even alerts the pest control company when there’s activity, so they can schedule a follow-up visit. For the first time, we can call customers to say, “Hey, there’s mouse activity, and we need to come by”—instead of waiting for them to call us. This Anticimex SMART technology is exclusively available from Killingsworth Environmental in the Greater Charlotte aea.

While glue traps might seem like a solution, they don’t work as well as snap traps and can stick to things you don’t want them to. If you ever need to free something from a glue trap, a little vegetable oil will do the trick.

Keeping Mice Out of Your Home

Of course, traps are only part of the solution. If you’re not sealing up the entry points mice use to get into your home, you’ll be fighting a losing battle. Make sure to inspect your home and seal any gaps larger than ¼ inch. Common entry points include cracks, holes, and spaces around pipes and utility lines. Don’t forget to check around doors and at the roofline, too, as mice are great climbers. If your home has brick walls with weep holes, don’t seal them—use specially designed covers that block mice but still allow airflow. A thorough inspection is key to getting long-term control over a mouse problem.

When you find gaps, use the right materials to close them. Expanding foam won’t cut it; mice can easily chew through it. Instead, use materials like Stuffit Copper Mesh or Xcluder Fill fabric, which won’t rust and are perfect for outdoor or damp areas. You can also seal them with appropriate sealants to keep everything in place. Steel wool can work in a pinch, but it tends to rust over time. Also, consider rodent-proof door sweeps and seals, which are made to resist chewing. Avoid using brush-style sweeps, though, as they aren’t as effective.

If you are looking for a professional solution, Killingsworth Environmental provides effective and reliable mice control solutions to residents of the greater Charlotte Area.

How Do I Control Mice While Keeping My Pets and Kids Safe?

Bedbug inspection

How to Know if Your Hotel Has Bedbugs

Upon entering a hotel room, do you typically reach for the tiny toiletries, take a leap onto the bed, or perhaps start by inspecting for bed bugs? Knowing what to look for is essential. Anticimex Carolinas Service Manager Christian Tweed has shared valuable insights on identifying bed bugs in your hotel room and preventing them from hitching a ride back home with you. And if bed bugs do become an unexpected part of your vacation, remember that Clark’s Pest Control is here to assist!



Q&A with a Pest Professional


How do bed bugs get inside hotels?


Bed bugs are primarily hitchhiking insects as opposed to foraging ones, meaning that they get carried around on people’s clothes and belongings. Someone with an active infestation in their home can easily bring bed bugs to their hotel, but they can also be picked up during travel (airplanes, taxis, and rideshare services) and brought to a hotel room.


What do people misunderstand about bed bugs in hotels?


From a probability standpoint, all hotels will deal with bed bugs at some point in time. If you think about a bed bug’s method of travel, there’s literally nothing a hotel can do to stop them from being carried in. What I have realized is that luxury hotels are more likely to have an aggressive response to dealing with a bed bug case once it’s identified as they tend to have a higher quality of service and a reputation to protect. While this isn’t always the case, it has been my experience more often than not.

Got bedbugs? Call Clark’s at 866-781-4991 today!

What do you recommend travelers do when they get to their room to check for bed bugs?


Most hotel headboards hang directly on the wall. I start my inspection here before even looking at the bed itself. I have found bed bugs, their exoskeletons, and the telltale black stains they leave behind around the edges of or in the crevices of headboards. If the headboard looks clean, move on to looking over the pillowcases and comforter for any signs or stains. You can dig into the bedding as deep as you want here, but I encourage people to look over the top layer of things at the very least.


What are some lesser-known signs of bed bugs in your hotel room?


The specifics of the black stains they leave behind, which as gross as it sounds, are just digested blood as that’s all that bed bugs feed on. If the stains are on a hard surface, they will be small dots as if left behind by an ink pen and will smear into a brownish gray when moisture is applied. If they’re on fabric, they will usually bleed along the fibers making a small diamond, square or X shape.


If there are bed bugs in your hotel room, can they travel home with you?


They absolutely can, however this is easy to prevent. While staying in a hotel, keep as much of your clothing and luggage off the beds as possible. Storing suitcases in the bathroom might sound odd, but it’s an effective method of prevention.

Don’t tackle bedbugs yourself, call Clark’s at 866-781-4991!

What should you do with your suitcase if you suspect your hotel has bed bugs?


When arriving home from a trip, leave your luggage in the garage or on a porch and bring your clothes in one load of laundry at a time. If the clothes are dirty, wash them like you normally would, if they’re clean then run them through the dryer for at least forty-five minutes. Once your suitcase is empty, vacuum over it meticulously (don’t forget to empty the vacuum when you’re done), or if you’re in the right climate, expose it to heat for a few days by placing it in your vehicle (parked in the sun) or for a few weeks in your attic.


The Clark’s Solution


If you brought bed bugs back to you home, Clark’s is here to help. Our Bedbug Control service is designed to eliminate bedbugs and create a safe, comfortable environment.


A Clark’s Pest Professional will do an inspection and recommend a plan of attack to get rid of bed bugs now and prevent them from hatching in the future. Call Clark’s at 866-781-4991 today for more information.




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