Bosque, acequias, and older adobes — the valley’s pest pressure, handled by a crew that knows it.
The North Valley runs on water — the river, the bosque, and the acequias that lace the neighborhoods between Rio Grande Boulevard and the ditch banks. That green is why people live here, and it’s why the pest calendar never really stops: moisture and cover keep rodents, roaches, and mosquitoes active in a metro that’s otherwise high desert.
The housing stock matters too. The valley’s older adobes and ranch homes have decades of settling cracks, swamp-cooler lines, and additions — every one a potential entry point. A crew that works the valley knows to check the cooler line before the kitchen, and the ditch-side fence line before the front yard.
Treatment leans on the same fundamentals that work everywhere — find the source, seal the entry, treat what’s active — tuned for valley conditions. 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 with free re-treats on service agreement plans.
If it’s scratching, trailing, biting, or buzzing somewhere in the North Valley, call and describe it — you’ll know what it probably is and what it’ll take before anyone rolls a truck.
When nights turn cold, mice leave the ditch banks and fields for the nearest warm structure — and valley homes are closest. The durable fix is exclusion: sealing the gaps, cooler-line penetrations, and garage-door edges they use. Trapping alone just makes room for the next wave.
Often, yes. American roaches (locals call them sewer roaches) travel plumbing and thrive in the valley’s moist, irrigated ground. Treatment targets the drains, the moisture, and the entry points — not just the one you saw on the tile.
Your side of the fence, yes: standing water, shaded rest vegetation, and patio zones can be treated and corrected. The acequia itself is district-managed, so a ditch-side yard won’t hit zero — you’ll get that straight at the inspection instead of an overpromise.
They need a better inspection. Settling cracks at sill level, viga ends, and old swamp-cooler penetrations are classic valley entry points that newer stucco builds don’t have. Mapping those is the difference between treating a symptom and closing the door.
Tell the technician what lives on the property when you call. Placements go where animals can’t reach, with pet-friendly options and methods that minimize pesticide use. That’s all scoped in the free inspection & estimate.
That’s a wildlife job: confirm what’s in the attic, remove it humanely, then screen and seal the entry — usually at the eave or where a branch touches the roof. See the bird & wildlife service for the full playbook.
Valley moisture keeps pest pressure more constant than the mesa neighborhoods, so recurring plans earn their keep here — bi-monthly, monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, and annual options are available. If a one-time job will fix your issue, that’s what you’ll be told.
Call (505) 555-0102 and describe what you’re seeing and where — the North Valley is core service area. You get straight answers on the phone and a free inspection & estimate. No obligation.
Describe what you’re seeing and get a free inspection & estimate. No pressure, no obligation.
(505) 555-0102