Bat Removal Training Testimonial from Jim Woods Roofing of South Dakota
As a roofer we come across bats in the house and after all the training we received we feel we can now do bat removal properly. Your training was a great value. We now know what to look for when bat proofing our customers' houses. Some of the techniques that you taught weren't even on our radar. Now we see the big picture about what bats are doing and why they are in the house. We learned a lot - your training was invaluable. It's like taking a crash college course on the animal itself and also the industry - what products and services are now available to better serve our customers. The training was so comprehensive and thorough that we're confident enough to add bat removal on as an add on service for our business. It's great. Every one is trying to increase profit margins. We're primarily roofers and we see a service here that we can now provide. It's a very simple system that you teach - any technician or roofer or gutter guy or handyman - can take the system that you teach and add it to what they're doing and immediately have value to offer to their customers. The jobs that we did with you here basically helped pay for the training. And it's a lot easier than roofing!
How to Get Rid of Bats using the BatCone & the Pro-cone
Jim Dreisacker - the inventor of the Batcone - shows various applications for Bat Removal using the Batcone & Pro-cone products. The innovative design of the Batcone 2 is ideal when a square shape is better suited to the entry port of a bat colony. It is designed with a built-in solid flange with mounting holes which allows for easy and fast installation. It can also be used with flexible vinyl flange, making it effective for virtually any surface application. The Batcone will not harm birds or bats but can succesfully drive them from residential and commercial buildings. It will remove birds without attracting them back to the site.
NPMA Wildlife Conference -- Jim Dreisacker, Westchester Wildlife
Jim Dreisacker explains that the little brown bat is one of New York's most abundant bat species and is often found roosting in attics or barns. If you have a bat in your house and there is any chance that the bat had contact with a person or pet, the most important thing you can do is to capture the bat and have it tested for rabies. Never release a bat if there is any possibility of pet or human exposure. Call your County's Department of Health for advice on what to do next.