This is a fairly typical job: the dead animal removal in the attic. Rats are most likely the most common animal to get into human dwellings (aside through humans, that is), found short life spans and frequently live in high numbers and they are persecuted with poisons and so forth and so forth, and so they die within buildings quite often. Since they often live in attics, they also have a tendency to die in attics. Therefore, the most common dead animal elimination job I have is the lifeless rat in the attic.
We don't always know whether it's a dead rat when I am called to the scene, however once inside the building, I could smell a rat. Rats tend to have a more foul-flavored stench than other dead creatures, but because of their smaller dimension, it's a weaker overall aroma. The truth is that the dead rat can be anywhere - coming from in a wall to underneath the bathtub or in your footwear.
But the first thing I do, once I get a sense of the-the region of the house where the animal odor is strongest, is to enter in the attic. Most of the time the rat will have burrowed under the padding and died there, and it is a royal pain in the ass to find. However, from time to time a light shines from the heavens and down upon an excellent rate just sitting at first glance. All I have to do is go pick it up. In this case, it had been a bit of a reach, but huge deal. I removed this and bagged it as well as sprayed the area with BioShield, and the smell went away.
Once I remove the dead rat, it is almost always a good idea to conduct general rate control on the house. Which means that I do a full inspection to find out how the rat had the house in the first place, and then I seal off all of the access holes. I trap and also remove any and all existing reside rats, and if necessary, brush you're and disinfect the loft, which may be full of rat poop. centurianwildlife.com
We don't always know whether it's a dead rat when I am called to the scene, however once inside the building, I could smell a rat. Rats tend to have a more foul-flavored stench than other dead creatures, but because of their smaller dimension, it's a weaker overall aroma. The truth is that the dead rat can be anywhere - coming from in a wall to underneath the bathtub or in your footwear.
But the first thing I do, once I get a sense of the-the region of the house where the animal odor is strongest, is to enter in the attic. Most of the time the rat will have burrowed under the padding and died there, and it is a royal pain in the ass to find. However, from time to time a light shines from the heavens and down upon an excellent rate just sitting at first glance. All I have to do is go pick it up. In this case, it had been a bit of a reach, but huge deal. I removed this and bagged it as well as sprayed the area with BioShield, and the smell went away.
Once I remove the dead rat, it is almost always a good idea to conduct general rate control on the house. Which means that I do a full inspection to find out how the rat had the house in the first place, and then I seal off all of the access holes. I trap and also remove any and all existing reside rats, and if necessary, brush you're and disinfect the loft, which may be full of rat poop. centurianwildlife.com