5 million homes in the U.S. will be effected by termites this year.

MAYBE

CONTACT US

CONTACT US

If you think you have termites, don't delay—contact us right away!

Click the green "Text Us" icon in the bottom right-hand corner or click the "Contact Us" banner above.

Sentricon X Wolfco

The best solution for Termites

sentricon-underground-01.png

Termites eat wood from the inside out along the grain, so damage often isn’t visible until it becomes significant.

About_Termites_Damaged_wood.jpg

Damage

Termites construct small, meandering mud tubes from moist soil and excrement. The tubes are about the diameter of a pencil, though they can become wider. Tubes can be seen on foundation walls or inside walls, on plumbing pipes and spanning crawl spaces between the ground and the subfloor.

About_Termites_Mud_tubes.jpg

Termite Mud Tube

Alaska.jpg

Termites often swarm in warmer weather and after a rain shower to start new colonies. The swarming event can be brief, so even if you do not see flying termites, you are likely to see the discarded wings around window sills, doors, heating vents, bathtubs and sinks after a swarm takes place. Termite swarmers use their wings to move away from their original colony. Their wings break off and they pair up and find locations with a wood source where the male and female can begin a new colony.

swarming.png

SWARMING