Pack rats, deer mice, wasps, and wildlife — East Mountain pest work built for the wildland edge.
Fifteen minutes up the canyon and the pest list changes completely. Tijeras and the East Mountain communities sit in pinon-juniper woodland — wildland edge, not city grid. The pests here aren’t the valley’s drain roaches; they’re pack rats in the engine bay, deer mice in the crawlspace, wasps under every sunny eave, and the raccoons, squirrels, and skunks that treat a mountain lot as part of their range.
Two things matter more up here than anywhere else in the metro. First, exclusion: wood-sided homes, cabins, skirted foundations, and detached garages offer far more entry points than a city stucco box. Second, cleanup done right — in New Mexico, deer mouse droppings can carry hantavirus, so a mouse problem in a mountain crawlspace is a health job, not just a nuisance.
The approach is built for the terrain: trapping and exclusion first for rodents, careful wet-method cleanup where droppings have accumulated, wasp work timed to the season, and wildlife removal that ends with the entry closed. 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.
Describe the property when you call — cabin or stick-built, skirted or slab, woodpile or barn — and the inspection shows up ready for it.
Yes — Tijeras is part of the service area alongside the Albuquerque metro. Call (505) 555-0102, describe the property and the problem, and scheduling is set on that call. Free inspection & estimate, no obligation.
In the East Mountains, usually a pack rat — they nest in engine bays, woodpiles, and stored vehicles, and they hoard shiny objects and chew wiring while they’re at it. The fix is trapping plus making the harborage unavailable: move the woodpile off the ground, seal the shed, and protect vehicles that sit.
No — don’t dry-sweep or vacuum them. In New Mexico, deer mouse droppings can carry hantavirus, and dry cleanup puts particles in the air. Ventilate, wet everything down with disinfectant, and wipe — or have the cleanup scoped as part of the job. Then the entry points get sealed so it doesn’t recur.
Sunny eaves, decks, sheds, and low pest competition make mountain homes prime wasp real estate, and they’ll rebuild under the same eave every season if the site isn’t treated. Nest removal plus treating the favored spots breaks the cycle.
Don’t seal anything — trapping an animal inside makes it worse. Note when you hear it (night thumping suggests raccoon, dawn/dusk scurrying suggests squirrel) and call. Removal comes first, humanely, then the entry gets screened and sealed.
Tell the crew what lives on the property. Bait stays in tamper-resistant stations, placements respect where animals roam, and there are pet-friendly options throughout — methods that minimize pesticide use are the default, not the upgrade.
It’s when rodents move IN — cold nights push mice and pack rats into crawlspaces, garages, and engine bays. Fall exclusion work is the highest-value pest money a mountain homeowner spends. Wasps and wildlife are the warm-season half of the calendar.
Yes — services are fully guaranteed, and service agreement plans include free re-treats. For mountain properties the recommendation often pairs a one-time exclusion job with a seasonal check — you’ll get the honest version, not the biggest one.
Describe what you’re seeing and get a free inspection & estimate. No pressure, no obligation.
(505) 555-0102