Exciting news we have now opened our second branch in Chipping Sodbury which can now service all your pest control requirements in Bristol, Bath, Avonmouth and South Gloucestershire. We provide a wide range of professional pest control services to homeowners and business clients throughout the Buckinghamshire, Berkshire and Hertfordshire and South Gloucestershire areas.
We offer quality, cost effective solutions to all pest control infestations including wildlife. PESTBGONE are a family run, independent pest control company, and we are proud of the reputation we have for providing the highest quality services and customer care. We offer a guaranteed, quick response service and our professional pest controllers are trained to the highest BPCA standards.
We offer quality, cost effective solutions to all pest control infestations including wildlife. PESTBGONE are a family run, independent pest control company, and we are proud of the reputation we have for providing the highest quality services and customer care. We offer a guaranteed, quick response service and our professional pest controllers are trained to the highest BPCA standards.
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As an animal the Grey Squirrel looks very attractive with its bushy tail and grey chestnut coat.
In park and garden areas people gain much pleasure from seeing this fairly tame animal close up.
However grey squirrels are not native to these shores and The North American grey squirrel to give its full name was deliberately introduced to Britain and other parts of Europe during the 19th Century merely as a curiosity to satisfy the Victorian trend for novelty.
Unfortunately, no one had the foresight at the time to see how much of an impact this alien species would have on our own native species of wildlife.
In park and garden areas people gain much pleasure from seeing this fairly tame animal close up.
However grey squirrels are not native to these shores and The North American grey squirrel to give its full name was deliberately introduced to Britain and other parts of Europe during the 19th Century merely as a curiosity to satisfy the Victorian trend for novelty.
Unfortunately, no one had the foresight at the time to see how much of an impact this alien species would have on our own native species of wildlife.
Generally speaking there are two species of mice which enter houses in the UK.
These are the house mouse and wood mouse.
House mice originated in Asia but have since spread throughout the world.
Along with brown rats, they are considered to be the most widespread terrestrial mammal other than humans.
In modern warm houses and with a supply of food available, house mice can breed all year round.
Wood mice only move indoors in autumn and winter time to escape the cold weather.
Both species mice need 3 grams (about 1/8th ounce) of food per day to survive and provided there is moisture in the food mice can manage without needing further liquids.
These are the house mouse and wood mouse.
House mice originated in Asia but have since spread throughout the world.
Along with brown rats, they are considered to be the most widespread terrestrial mammal other than humans.
In modern warm houses and with a supply of food available, house mice can breed all year round.
Wood mice only move indoors in autumn and winter time to escape the cold weather.
Both species mice need 3 grams (about 1/8th ounce) of food per day to survive and provided there is moisture in the food mice can manage without needing further liquids.
This species can be found throughout the world - the adult is typically encountered during summer and early autumn but infestations that live in human dwellings may be seen at other times of the year.
There is the Case Bearing Clothes Moth (Tinea Pellionella) and the Common Clothes Moth (Tineola Bisselliella).
Tinea Pellionella is silvery grey to shiny light brown in colour, with dark grey hairs on the top of its head.
The adult of this species has a wingspan of 9 to 16 mm and its forewings are brown with one large spot and a few smaller black spots.
There is the Case Bearing Clothes Moth (Tinea Pellionella) and the Common Clothes Moth (Tineola Bisselliella).
Tinea Pellionella is silvery grey to shiny light brown in colour, with dark grey hairs on the top of its head.
The adult of this species has a wingspan of 9 to 16 mm and its forewings are brown with one large spot and a few smaller black spots.
Although many people are frightened of wasps, by explaining their life cycle, this leaflet aims to allay some of those fears, through a better understanding the insects themselves.
The queen wasp emerges from hibernation in the spring and looks for a site for a new nest.
You will recognise her by her size (about three times the size of a worker wasp).
She does not use the old nest from a previous year.
There are no males at this time of year, as the queen was fertilised last autumn and the males died off at the end of the previous year.
The queen wasp emerges from hibernation in the spring and looks for a site for a new nest.
You will recognise her by her size (about three times the size of a worker wasp).
She does not use the old nest from a previous year.
There are no males at this time of year, as the queen was fertilised last autumn and the males died off at the end of the previous year.
Bees are familiar insects in the garden.
To many people the sound of bees buzzing from flower to flower is part of the sound of summer.
Sadly, changes to farming and land management practices have not been kind to any of our bee species.
In the last 70 years or so two species have become extinct and others have declined dramatically.
Further extinctions of our native bee species are inevitable unless we act quickly to help them.
The reason for these declines is simple; bees feed on pollen and nectar which they collect from flowers, and there are now far fewer flowers in the countryside.
To many people the sound of bees buzzing from flower to flower is part of the sound of summer.
Sadly, changes to farming and land management practices have not been kind to any of our bee species.
In the last 70 years or so two species have become extinct and others have declined dramatically.
Further extinctions of our native bee species are inevitable unless we act quickly to help them.
The reason for these declines is simple; bees feed on pollen and nectar which they collect from flowers, and there are now far fewer flowers in the countryside.
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