In South Florida, pest control is a necessity year-round. The hot and humid weather keeps bugs active all the time. There are many reasons why pest control should be a consideration for your home.
If you’ve found these pesky insects in your home, you need to know how to get rid of carpet beetles as soon as possible. They can cause extensive damage to many items in your household. Not only do they feed off of carpet fibers, but they can also destroy furniture and even eat your clothes.
Besides cockroaches, ants can be the most common insect pest problem in many South Florida homes. Knowing how to identify the different types of ants, where they hide, what they feed on, and the conditions they like, can help you as the homeowner prevents ants from invading.
If you’re tired of ghost ants constantly invading your home and are wondering how to get rid of them, the experts at Hulett Environmental Services can help.
Carpenter ants are a common household pest that includes many various species. Here in Florida, we have Florida carpenter ants, Camponotus floridanus and Camponotus tortuganus. These ants are among the most common indoor pests in the state.
Unlike some pests that hibernate when the temperatures drop, cockroaches don’t take the winter off. In states with mild winters like Florida, roaches remain active year-round.
Ants play complex roles in nature. While some ant species offer real benefits to the environment, others are far more problematic, especially for Florida homeowners.
If spiders don’t already send you running in the other direction, these top five most venomous spiders ought to. Not only do they look unsettling; these arachnids possess dangerously potent venom. Getting bitten by one could have devastating consequences.
Are you battling mysterious brown spots on your Florida lawn? There’s a good chance these spots are a result of brown patch fungus, a common issue faced by homeowners across the Sunshine State.
Here in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast, there is no shortage of pests, bugs, and insects that survive by eating the plants throughout our landscape.
Drywood termites are a serious threat to properties across the southern U.S., and unfortunately, south Florida.
Termite tenting is something all South Floridians know about, or will know about, but no one wants to deal with. Fumigation can be costly, and the inside and outside preparation that is required is quite the burden. Not to mention, you and your family will have to evacuate for a number of days.
On a warm, humid evening, perhaps following a gentle spring rain, the air is alive with thousands of tiny winged insects, darting and fluttering in a chaotic dance, navigating towards the light around your property.
Whether they’re buzzing through your barbecue, harassing you as they dart around your head, or contaminating food in open containers, flies are an unwelcome sight in any home. But how did they get inside?
Ants and termites are both incredibly common pests. They are so common and look enough alike (termites and flying ants in particular look eerily alike) that, at first glance, many people confuse the two. It is important, though, that you learn how to tell the two apart.