The front view of a gray racoon standing on four legs looking to its left

Procyon lotor

Color: Fluffy gray-brown coat, black face mask, ringed tail.
Shape: Small to medium size with slightly rounded ears and small feet.
Size: Head and body length of 16-28 inches, weight of 7-19 pounds, but can range from 4 to 30 pounds.

Versatile and adaptable, raccoons are known for their ability to live and thrive almost anywhere, though they prefer locations near water. Avid dumpster divers, these masked bandits have mastered the art of living among humans in urban and suburban environments.

Raccoons have extremely dense undercoats and very sensitive, dexterous paws. With a knack for remembering tasks up to 3 years later, these smart, curious, adorable creatures will eat your ornamental fish, soil your pool, smash your bird feeders, lay waste to your garden, and eat right through your sheet rock.

Raccoon Habits
Though raccoons are nocturnal, they sometimes forage during the day. Their diet consists of a mix of vertebrates, invertebrates, and plant material, but they have been known to feast on fish, insects, fruit, Jell-O, and whatever you had for dinner the night before. They will engage in social behavior with other raccoons but are often solitary creatures.

Where Do Raccoons Live?
While they thrive in sparsely wooded areas and brush, in recent decades raccoons have adapted to urban life. Raccoons prefer to make their homes and bear their litters in tree hollows, rock crevices, or abandoned animal dens, but they will also nest in attics and crawl spaces.

Are Raccoons Dangerous?
With their bushy tails and a habit of washing their food in water, these critters are adorable, but they may bite and scratch when threatened.
Raccoons also carry rabies, fleas, distemper, and parasites like roundworm, which can be contracted by humans attempting to clean up raccoon waste without wearing a mask. In addition to threats to your health, raccoons can severely damage crawl spaces and attics by chewing through walls, sheetrock, and support structures.

How Do You Deter Raccoons?
You can prevent a raccoon invasion through exclusion methods like using metal flashing and metal mesh to cover all possible entry routes into your home.
Before they reach your home, keep a lid on your trashcans and secure the lids with bungee cords or weights such as cinder blocks. Double-bagging meat products can also keep raccoons from smelling last night’s scraps. Don’t leave pet food outside, rake up fallen tree fruit, and bring in your bird feeders at night. Installing electric fences around your yard, garden, pond, shrubs, and trees can also keep raccoons away. Clean up any yard debris such as brush, woodpiles, or old logs that could be used as raccoon cover or housing. Motion-activated floodlights, radios tuned to talk radio stations, sprinklers and ultrasonic noisemakers can also scare away these wily creatures. Strong smells like cayenne pepper, mothballs, human hair, bleach, ammonia, predator urine, and mint-scented trash bags can also act as deterrents. Granular repellents provide effective protection around flowerbeds, attics, sheds, and barns, while liquid spray repellants are ideal around trashcans, plants, roofing, flowers, trees, and bird feeders.

Signs That You Have a Raccoon Infestation
If you suspect a raccoon infestation, look out for raccoon footprints, which resemble human footprints but are only 4 inches long. Scratch marks and droppings left at the bases of trees or woodpiles are also strong signs of raccoon activity.
If these signs are undetected, look out for toppled garbage cans, trash strewn across your yard, or low growls and shuffling noises as raccoons run along your roof or inside your walls.

How Do You Get a Raccoon Out of Your House?
Raccoons enjoy warm, dry places, so it’s no surprise that they might find your attic particularly inviting. Entering through eaves, vents, and loose soffits, raccoons will wreck your screens and insulation, eat holes in the side of your home, and make a mess of your attic.
If they have taken up residence in your attic, wait until dark and then blast them with music and lights. Once all the raccoons and baby raccoons have fled or been removed, trim back any tree branches they might use to climb your roof and patch up any holes bigger than 4 inches across.
If adult raccoons are found in your attic, babies are likely to follow. If the mother is not present when you discover her nest, the young can be used to lure her into a live bait trap. Female raccoons typically give birth in January or February in the South, and as late as April in the North.

How Do You Get Rid of a Raccoon Infestation?
The best way to get rid of a raccoon is to bait a live trap with fruit, marshmallows, or starchy foods, and then take the raccoon to a hospitable place at least 10 miles away from your home. Since it is illegal in most states to trap and relocate raccoons without a license, it is best to leave this work up to the professionals.

If you suspect a raccoon problem, contact Rochester Pest Pro for a quote.

Rochester Pest Pro, Inc is based in Henrietta, NY and proudly serves the pest control needs of businesses and residents throughout the entire Rochester area.

We can be reached by phone at 585-486-4815 anytime during regular office hours, or 24/7 by writing to us through our website’s contact page.

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