Early Summer Wildlife Control Checklist
by Michelle Engle • June 17, 2026
Early Summer Wildlife Control Checklist: Stop Nuisance Animals Before They Settle In
By early summer, wildlife activity is in full swing. Warm weather, available food, active nesting, and growing young can bring raccoons, squirrels, bats, birds, skunks, groundhogs, chipmunks, and other nuisance animals closer to homes, barns, sheds, gardens, and commercial properties.
The best summer wildlife control strategy is not just reacting after damage appears. It is inspecting early, identifying entry points, removing attractants, and using the right combination of exclusion tools, traps, repellents, baits, lures, and odor control products for the situation.
Here is a practical early-summer checklist to help protect structures and landscapes before small wildlife problems turn into expensive repairs.
1. Inspect Attics, Rooflines, Vents, and Soffits
Attics and rooflines are high-priority areas in early summer. Raccoons, squirrels, bats, and birds may use loose vents, gaps in soffits, damaged fascia, chimney openings, and roof returns as access points.
Look for:
- Scratching or movement sounds
- Droppings below entry points
- Staining around vents or gaps
- Chewed edges, loose screening, or damaged covers
- Nesting material near vents, eaves, or attic spaces
Before sealing any opening, confirm that no animals or dependent young are inside. This is especially important with bats and nesting birds, since exclusion timing may be regulated by state or local laws. Once the space is clear, use professional-grade exclusion products such as vent covers, hardware cloth, sealants, one-way doors where appropriate, and structural barriers to prevent re-entry.
2. Protect Gardens, Lawns, and Landscapes
Early summer gardens are attractive to groundhogs, rabbits, deer, chipmunks, moles, voles, and other digging or browsing animals. Fresh vegetables, flowers, mulch beds, and soft soil can quickly become feeding or burrowing areas.
A good summer prevention plan includes:
- Inspecting fence lines and garden edges
- Locating burrow entrances before damage spreads
- Using repellents and deterrents according to label directions
- Installing barriers where animals are digging or squeezing through
- Choosing traps, baits, or lures suited to the target animal and local regulations
Reapply outdoor repellents as directed, especially after heavy rain, irrigation, or rapid plant growth. For repeated damage, combine habitat modification with exclusion or trapping tools for better long-term control.
3. Check Decks, Porches, Sheds, and Crawl Spaces
Skunks, raccoons, opossums, and groundhogs often take advantage of quiet, shaded spaces under decks, porches, sheds, and crawl spaces. These areas offer cover, cooler temperatures, and protection from people and pets.
Walk the property and look for fresh digging, displaced soil, odor, tracks, droppings, or visible entry gaps. If activity is present, identify the animal before choosing a control method. Once the animal is gone, close access with durable exclusion materials and monitor the area for new digging.
Do not overlook attractants nearby. Pet food, unsecured garbage, bird seed, fallen fruit, compost, and open crawl space access can keep nuisance wildlife returning.
4. Use Odor Control and Cleaning Supplies After Removal
Summer heat can make wildlife odors stronger and sanitation issues more urgent. After an animal has been removed or excluded, cleaning the affected area helps reduce lingering odor, contamination concerns, and future attraction.
Attics, crawl spaces, wall voids, garages, and sheds may need odor control, cleaning supplies, protective gear, and in some cases insulation replacement or cleanup tools. Addressing the source of the odor is just as important as treating the smell itself.
5. Keep a Job-Ready Wildlife Control Kit
For wildlife professionals and property managers, early summer is a smart time to restock the supplies used most often during busy calls.
A seasonal kit may include:
- Cage traps and species-appropriate trapping supplies
- Baits and lures
- Exclusion tools and hardware cloth
- Vent covers and one-way doors
- Repellents and deterrents
- Gloves, PPE, and handling tools
- Odor control and cleaning products
- Reference materials for species-specific control
Having the right products on hand saves time when wildlife activity increases and customers need fast, reliable help.
Final Summer Wildlife Control Tip
Wildlife control is most effective when it is specific to the animal, the structure, and the season. Early summer is the time to inspect, prevent, and repair before wildlife has more time to cause damage.
Wildlife Control Supplies offers professional nuisance wildlife control equipment, including traps, baits, lures, exclusion tools, repellents, deterrents, odor control, cleaning supplies, and shop-by-animal resources to help you choose the right solution for the job.
Browse Wildlife Control Supplies by animal or product type to prepare for summer wildlife activity with confidence.
Suggested Internal Links: Shop by Animal, Traps, Baits & Lures, Exclusion Products, Repellents & Deterrents, Odor Control & Cleaning, Bird Control, Bat Control.
Sources referenced for brand/category alignment: Wildlife Control Supplies and WCS Blog.