Fox Removal in Chatham, VA
Both red and gray foxes are present throughout Pittsylvania County. The county's agricultural landscape and open farmland suit red foxes well; its wooded creek corridors and timber edges provide the habitat gray foxes prefer. Animal Dispatch is based in Gretna — Pittsylvania County is our home territory — and we handle fox removal throughout the Chatham area regularly.
Inspection, deterrence, humane trapping when needed, and den closure.
Prefers open farmland and field edges. Long-legged, fast, and highly adaptable to suburban and agricultural environments. Hunts mice, rabbits, and birds in open country. The more commonly spotted species in residential settings.
Prefers wooded creek drainages and brush piles. The only canid in Virginia that can climb trees — strong hooked claws allow it to scale leaning trees and access areas a red fox typically wouldn't.
Pittsylvania County's mix of open farmland, wooded edges, creek bottoms, and older homes gives both fox species consistent food and denning habitat. Red foxes are frequently seen along field edges, farm fence rows, and in rural residential neighborhoods at dawn and dusk. Gray foxes favor the wooded edges, brush piles, and creek drainages throughout the county. Poultry predation and spring denning under sheds, barns, and outbuildings are the two most common conflict situations across the county.
We assess the situation — species, active den location, whether pups are present, and what's drawing foxes to the property. The approach varies significantly based on what we find.
If no pups are present, humane deterrence — motion lighting, scent repellents, temporary barriers — is often enough to encourage foxes to move on without trapping. Foxes are intelligent and responsive to environmental changes.
Used when deterrence fails or when pups are confirmed under a structure. Camera-monitored traps ensure fast, humane response. All family members — adults and pups — must be out before den closure.
Once all foxes are clear, ground-level entry points beneath sheds and decks are sealed against re-entry. Coop and poultry protection assessment included where relevant.
- Secure poultry coops with hardware cloth — not chicken wire, which foxes can bite through — on all sides and the bottom
- Use latches that require two steps to open — foxes are intelligent and have been documented working simple single-step latches
- Block ground-level access beneath sheds and decks with hardware cloth before spring — March is when foxes begin den selection
- Remove outdoor pet food overnight — food left outside is a reliable fox attractant
- Secure garbage and compost — foxes are opportunistic and will revisit reliable food sources
Fox problem in Chatham?
Denning under a structure or hitting your poultry — timing matters. Deterrence before pups arrive is the easiest path. We assess the situation first and recommend the right approach.
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