Flying Squirrel Removal in Blairs, VA
Flying squirrels are present throughout Blairs and Pittsylvania County, where the mix of residential properties near wooded edges and older home stock provides both the hardwood canopy access and the structural gaps they need. Nocturnal, colony-forming, and frequently misidentified as mice, flying squirrel infestations often go undetected for extended periods.
Animal Dispatch handles flying squirrel removal in Blairs and Pittsylvania County with full-home exclusion and a 3-year guarantee. $75 inspection.
Blairs sits at the edge of suburban residential and open farmland, and the wooded edges and mature hardwood trees throughout Pittsylvania County give Southern Flying Squirrels both food and gliding routes to rooflines. They enter through gaps as small as a nickel — ridge vents, gable vents, and construction joint separations are the most common points. Older homes in the area frequently have these small, consistent gaps. Flying squirrels are communal; the colony's accumulated urine in insulation is typically the first sign that prompts homeowners to look more carefully than the soft nighttime sounds.
- Strictly nocturnal — noise after dark only
- Colony of 5–20 in one void
- Enters through nickel-sized gaps
- No structural chewing damage
- Urine odor is primary impact
- Clustered droppings near nest
- Diurnal — active at dawn and dusk
- Typically 1–2 animals
- Chews entry holes in wood
- Chewing and wiring damage
- Nut caches in insulation
- Scattered droppings along paths
- Activity at any hour, day or night
- In walls as well as attic
- Scratching inside wall voids
- Gnaws food packaging and wiring
- Droppings throughout structure
- Enters from ground level
- Nocturnal — exits at dusk consistently
- Colony structure, similar to flying squirrel
- Crumbly guano with insect fragments
- Dark smudge marks at entry gaps
- Cannot be trapped — exclusion only
- Enters through 3/8-inch gaps
We identify the species, locate all entry points, assess nest and urine accumulation, and determine the extent of the colony. Proper identification before exclusion work begins is essential.
One-way exclusion devices allow flying squirrels to exit but not re-enter. Timing adjusted if young pups are in the nest — litters are raised twice yearly in late winter and early summer.
All entry points sealed — every gap down to nickel-size at ridge vents, gable vents, construction joints, and soffits. Partial exclusion on a flying squirrel job is rarely effective.
If flying squirrels re-enter through a point we sealed, we return. Flying squirrels have strong site fidelity and return to successful den locations — the exclusion must be complete.
- Screen ridge vents and gable vents with fine hardware cloth — standard screen is not small enough for flying squirrel gaps
- Inspect construction joints and soffit-to-roofline transitions annually — these develop gaps over time
- Trim tree branches that reach or overhang the roofline — flying squirrels use them as launch points
- If you detect ammonia odor from the attic, act quickly — colony urine damage compounds over time
- On seasonal properties, inspect the attic on arrival each season before assuming all is well
Flying squirrel problem in Blairs?
Noise after dark that sounds like mice but comes from the attic is a common flying squirrel pattern. An inspection identifies the species, the entry points, and what full-home exclusion will take.
Schedule an Inspection — $75 Contact Us