Rodent Removal
Cherry Hill, NJ
Protecting South Jersey's Premier Suburb From the Mice That Love Mid-Century Homes
Cherry Hill's 74,000 residents enjoy one of South Jersey's most desirable suburban communities, where over 70% of the housing stock was built between 1940 and 1980. Those mid-century colonials, split-levels, and Cape Cods with their mature landscaping are wonderful to live in -- and equally wonderful for mice looking for a warm attic.
House Mice Thrive in Cherry Hill's Mid-Century Suburban Architecture
House mice are Cherry Hill's dominant rodent problem, and the math is straightforward. More than 70 percent of the township's housing was built between 1940 and 1980, during a suburban boom that transformed farmland into developments like Barclay Farms, Kingston Estates, and Cherry Hill Estates. These homes were built with the materials and methods of their era -- gaps around original plumbing and electrical penetrations, soffit vents sized to 1960s standards, and weep holes in brick facades that were never screened. After 50 to 70 years of settling, those small imperfections have widened into mouse-sized entry points. The township's mature tree canopy makes things worse. Cherry Hill's neighborhoods are defined by their established landscaping -- decades-old oaks, maples, and ornamental plantings that create beautiful streetscapes and also provide cover and travel routes for mice moving between properties. Deer mice appear near Cooper River Park's 346 acres of wetland and grassland habitat, where the park's wildlife corridor extends rodent pressure into adjacent residential streets. Cherry Hill's 99.5% owner-occupancy rate in neighborhoods like Barclay-Kingston means residents notice problems quickly, but the consistent construction era across the township means the same vulnerabilities repeat house after house, block after block. If your neighbor has mice, the same gap pattern likely exists on your home too.
Why Cherry Hill?
Over 70% of Cherry Hill's housing stock was built between 1940 and 1980, creating township-wide patterns of age-related entry points -- deteriorated soffit joints, unscreened weep holes, and settling gaps around original utility penetrations -- that house mice exploit systematically across entire neighborhoods.
Rodent Species in Cherry Hill
Most common rodent pest in Cherry Hill
How to Know You Have Rodents in Cherry Hill
Spot these warning signs before the problem gets worse
Small dark droppings (rice-grain sized) in kitchen cabinets and pantries, especially in homes with original 1960s cabinetry where gaps exist behind the units
Scratching sounds in walls and ceilings during evening hours, frequently misidentified as house settling noises in these 50-to-70-year-old structures
Nesting material pulled from attic insulation visible near soffit vents when viewed from the exterior with a flashlight during evening inspections
Mouse urine staining on garage ceiling drywall near the house connection, visible as yellowish spots that indicate traffic between the garage and living space
Noticed any of these signs?
Rodents reproduce fast. A small problem today becomes a full infestation within weeks.
Call for Same-Day InspectionWhen 70% of a Township Was Built in the Same Era, Mice Know Exactly Where to Look
Cherry Hill's rapid post-war development created remarkably consistent housing stock across the township. The population exploded from 10,358 in 1950 to 64,395 by 1970, with entire neighborhoods built by the same developers using the same construction methods. Barclay Farms, Kingston Estates, Erlton, and Woodcrest all share similar vulnerability patterns: original aluminum or wood soffits with aging joints, brick veneer with unscreened weep holes, garage-to-house connections with settling gaps, and foundation sill plates that have shifted over decades. A mouse exclusion approach that works on one 1962 Barclay Farms colonial will often apply almost identically to the house three doors down.
01Common Entry Points
02How Rodents Get Established
Barclay Farms Colonial: Same Mouse Problem, Ten Houses Deep
01 The Problem
Homeowner called about mice in the kitchen and attic. During the initial consultation, she mentioned that three neighbors on her street had recently dealt with the same issue. A walk of the block confirmed identical entry patterns on every home -- all built by the same developer in 1963 with the same soffit detail and brick weep hole configuration.
Location: Barclay Farms
02 What We Discovered
Inspection identified 11 active entry points on the customer's home, all at predictable locations: weep holes along the front facade, soffit joints at the roofline, and a settling gap where the attached garage met the main structure. Mouse activity was concentrated in the attic and kitchen wall cavity, with an estimated population of 15 to 20 animals based on droppings volume and nesting evidence.
03 The Solution
Complete exclusion of all 11 entry points using copper mesh and steel-reinforced sealant at weep holes, aluminum flashing at soffit joints, and concrete patching at the garage connection. Interior trapping program cleared active population over two weeks. Attic insulation spot-treated and contaminated sections replaced. Provided the homeowner with a block-specific vulnerability report she could share with neighbors.
The Result
Mouse-free within 18 days. Three neighbors subsequently hired us using the same vulnerability report as a starting point, which reduced their inspection time since the entry patterns were nearly identical across the block.
Rodent Challenges Specific to Cherry Hill
Consistent 1940-1980 construction era across the township means identical rodent vulnerabilities repeat on virtually every block
Cooper River Park's 346-acre wildlife corridor extends deer mouse and field mouse pressure deep into adjacent Erlton and Springdale neighborhoods
Mature tree canopy provides highway cover for rodents moving between properties and accessing rooflines from overhanging branches
High owner-occupancy and affluent demographics mean residents expect thorough, premium-quality exclusion work with invisible repairs
Finished basements common in Cherry Hill colonials conceal mouse activity behind walls and drop ceilings until populations are well established
Seasonal influx of mice during fall cooling period is amplified by the sheer volume of identically vulnerable mid-century homes
Rodent Removal Service Areas in Cherry Hill
We serve all Cherry Hill neighborhoods and surrounding areas
Cherry Hill Neighborhoods We Serve
ZIP Codes Served
Rodent Removal in Nearby Cities
We Don't Use Poison
Most pest control companies will lay bait and leave. The rodents eat the poison, crawl into your walls, and die. Then you get the smell. That rotting-animal stench that seeps through drywall and can last for weeks.
Worse, poison doesn't fix the entry points. New rodents follow the same scent trails right back in. You end up on an endless cycle of baiting, dying, and stinking.
No Dead Rodents in Walls
Poison means carcasses you can't reach. We remove them alive.
No Recurring Bait Contracts
We seal entry points permanently. One visit, lasting results.
Exclusion-First Method
Find the gaps, seal the gaps, guarantee the gaps stay sealed.
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