Wildlife removal in Glendale: what to know
Glendale is a quiet residential neighbourhood of detached and semi-detached homes bordering Forest Park — the park's 538-acre forested footprint is a major source of wildlife, stinging-insect and rodent pressure that feeds directly into the adjacent residential streets on the park's southern boundary.
Lutheran Cemetery and Forest Park together create a substantial green buffer that elevates tick, mosquito and occasional-invader pressure for the homes bordering both; stinging-insect nest building in the park-edge eaves and chimneys of older homes is common in summer.
Myrtle Avenue's commercial strip and Cooper Avenue's neighbourhood retail add rodent pressure to the surrounding residential blocks; older homes with basements near the commercial areas see the highest rodent and carpenter-ant activity.
Signs you need wildlife removal
- Scratching or scurrying in the attic, walls, or chimney
- Damaged soffits, vents, or roofline gaps
- Torn insulation or chewed wiring
- Animal droppings in an attic or crawl space
How we treat wildlife removal in Glendale
Squirrels, raccoons and opossums get into attics, soffits, chimneys and wall voids — chewing wiring, tearing insulation and creating fire and health hazards. Removing the animal is only half the job; without sealing how it got in, another moves in.
We humanely remove the animal, check for young, and exclude the property — sealing entry points with durable materials so wildlife can't return. We work within New York's wildlife regulations throughout.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Glendale and the surrounding Queens area — including Myrtle Avenue, Forest Park, Cooper Avenue, Lutheran Cemetery — across ZIP codes 11385.