Fallon Rodent Control for High Desert Agricultural Properties

What Makes Pest Pressure Different in Churchill County's Farm Country?

When dealing with rodent pressure in Fallon, agricultural surroundings create conditions unlike those in Nevada's urban markets. Grain storage, hay bales, and irrigation infrastructure along the Newlands Reclamation Project canals give mice and rats constant food sources and travel corridors directly into adjacent residential neighborhoods. Once rodents establish foraging routes between farm properties and homes near South Maine Street or the development clusters along US-50, populations can cycle continuously through a neighborhood unless entry points are sealed at the structure level — not just baited in open areas.

Rodent and Wildlife Services understands this farm-edge dynamic in Fallon. Our technicians trace the gap between where activity originates on the landscape and where it terminates inside your walls, attic, or crawl space. That cause-effect mapping is what allows us to stop reinfestations rather than repeatedly trap what comes back. Properties near the Naval Air Station Fallon flight corridors and the agricultural perimeter east of town each present their own entry-point vulnerabilities that a standardized approach simply misses.

If mice or rats are getting inside your Fallon home despite previous attempts at control, the missing piece is usually structural exclusion. Schedule an assessment and find out exactly which gaps are letting them in.


How Rodent Control Adapts to Fallon's Agricultural Conditions

Fallon's position as Churchill County's agricultural hub — with alfalfa fields, dairy operations, and irrigation canals feeding directly into residential zones — demands rodent exclusion methods built around continuous pressure rather than one-time service. Our approach accounts for the seasonal flux that follows harvest cycles and canal water fluctuations, when displaced field rodents actively search for shelter inside nearby structures:

  • Perimeter assessment identifying how farm-edge rodent corridors connect to your foundation, slab penetrations, and utility entries
  • Stainless steel mesh and hardened sealants applied at vents, crawl space access points, and pipe penetrations that standard foam cannot hold
  • Attic inspection for Norway rat harborage in blown insulation, which retains odor trails that attract successive waves of rodents
  • Garage door bottom-seal upgrades addressing the most common residential entry point in rural Nevada properties
  • Follow-up monitoring timed around Fallon's spring planting and fall harvest periods when field displacement peaks

Request a free estimate for your Fallon property and get a written scope showing every entry point that needs sealing — not just a trap placement plan.