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Soil & wood

Termite Control in Citrus Heights, CA

Citrus Heights sits in dual-termite country: subterranean termites work up from the soil while drywood termites live in the attic and trim. A local pro inspects and treats both.

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Subterranean termite mud tubes on a concrete foundation, a common Sacramento Valley finding

Termite control in Citrus Heights, CA has to account for two different termites, because the Sacramento Valley has both. Subterranean termites nest in the soil and must keep contact with it, foraging up into the structure through foundation cracks, plumbing penetrations, and the mud tubes they build up a foundation face, then feeding on framing from the inside out. They swarm in spring, especially after rain. Drywood termites are different: they live entirely inside the wood with no soil contact, colonizing attic framing, roof eaves, fascia, and window and door trim, and they swarm in the late summer and fall, leaving little piles of six-sided pellets that look like sawdust or coffee grounds below the infested wood. The two need different treatments, so the first step is always an inspection to identify which termite, and where. An experienced local exterminator inspects the slab, crawl space, attic, and trim and matches the treatment to what is found.

Two termites, two problems

Subterranean termites are the soil termite. In Citrus Heights they exploit slab cracks, expansion joints, plumbing penetrations, and any wood-to-soil contact around the porch, fence, or crawl space, and the clay-loam soil that cracks in the dry summer gives them more paths up. The signs are pencil-width mud tubes on the foundation or crawl-space piers, hollow-sounding wood, and spring swarms of dark winged reproductives near windows.

Drywood termites need no soil at all. They fly in and colonize dry, sound wood directly, which is why they turn up in attic rafters, eaves, fascia boards, and window frames. The classic sign is a small pile of hard, six-sided fecal pellets beneath a tiny kick-out hole, and a late-summer or fall swarm of winged termites indoors near a window.

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Termites or flying ants?

A swarm is often the first thing a homeowner notices, and it is easy to mistake for flying ants. The difference matters because the treatments are nothing alike. Termites have a straight, thick waist, straight antennae, and four wings of equal length. Ants have a pinched waist, bent antennae, and front wings longer than the back. If large winged insects appear indoors near a window, save a few and have them identified rather than guessing.

Timing is a clue too. A spring swarm points toward subterranean termites coming up from the soil, while a late-summer or fall swarm and pellet piles point toward drywood termites in the wood above.

How the work is done

It starts with an inspection of the slab, crawl space, attic, eaves, and trim for tubes, damage, pellets, and swarmers. Subterranean termites are handled with a liquid termiticide soil treatment around the foundation and, where a patio or slab abuts the house, treating the soil beneath, plus in-ground monitoring where appropriate. Drywood termites are handled with treatments matched to the extent of the infestation, from local wood treatment of accessible galleries to whole-structure fumigation for widespread activity.

Moisture correction backs it up, because damp wood and soil contact invite subterranean termites: direct water away from the foundation, fix leaks, keep the crawl space ventilated and dry, and remove wood-to-soil contact around the porch and fence. A local pro matches the plan to the termite found and the construction of the home.

FAQ

Termite Control questions

How do I know if I have subterranean or drywood termites?

Subterranean termites build pencil-width mud tubes on the foundation and crawl-space piers and swarm in spring. Drywood termites live in the attic, eaves, and trim with no soil contact and leave little piles of hard six-sided pellets under a kick-out hole, swarming in late summer or fall. The treatments differ, so an inspection identifies which one before any work.

What are the little piles of what looks like sawdust or coffee grounds?

Those are drywood termite pellets, the six-sided fecal pellets they push out of a small kick-out hole below infested wood in an attic, eave, or window frame. Finding them means drywood termites are active in the wood above, and the wood should be inspected to map the extent before treatment.

Do I need to tent the whole house?

Not always. Whole-structure fumigation is used when drywood termites are widespread, but limited or accessible infestations can often be handled with local wood treatments, and subterranean termites are treated at the soil rather than by tenting. A local pro recommends the fit after inspecting what termite is present and how far it has spread.

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Serving Citrus Heights, Orangevale, Fair Oaks, Antelope, Carmichael, North Highlands & Roseville.

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