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Swift Wildlife Removal
Indian River County · Coastal Woodland Wildlife Management
Wabasso · Hammock-edge & foundation digging — stopped

Armadillo Removal in Wabasso, FL

Armadillo trapping and burrow control for Wabasso yards — we remove the diggers with directional trapping (bait won’t work), close the burrows, and protect the lawns, beds, footings and outbuildings they undermine along the hammock edge.

  • Ground-to-roofline specialists
  • Humane & licensed
  • Written guarantee
Armadillo Removal — humane wildlife service on the Treasure Coast
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§2 Wabasso Property Context

Armadillo Removal in Wabasso’s coastal woodland

Wabasso straddles the mainland and the route to Orchid Island, near the Environmental Learning Center and the Jungle Trail hammock, where lagoon-and-hammock ground gives armadillos soft, grub-rich soil to root. Our armadillo removal service targets the digging animal, removes it humanely and seals its burrows so your lawn stops turning over at night.

Grub-rich hammock soil Foundation & shed burrows Mangrove-edge cover Nightly rooting
Swift Wildlife on an armadillo removal job on the Treasure Coast
§3 How It Uses Local Habitat

How armadillos use Wabasso’s coastal woodland

The lagoon-front mangrove and Jungle Trail hammock around Wabasso keep the soil moist and grub-rich, and the mix of mainland lots and island-access properties gives armadillos both soft foraging turf and dense hammock cover. An animal working out of the hammock edge finds easy digging and hiding places across the neighborhood.

Rooting the turf all night for grubs, it punches cone-shaped holes and then digs a den into firm ground. It favors tunneling under outbuildings and against footings, and along the hammock edges, where a long burrow can undermine the structure while its rooting spreads across the lawn.

Where it works the canopy
  • Grub-rich hammock soil
  • Foundation & shed burrows
  • Mangrove-edge cover
  • Nightly rooting
§4 Early Detection Indicators

Early signs of armadillo activity

On a Wabasso lot these are the earliest signs to catch — around the roofline, the yard and the water’s edge.

Cone-shaped holes at dawn

A scatter of narrow divots each morning, densest along the hammock edge where moist, leaf-fed soil keeps grubs near the surface.

A burrow under an outbuilding

A rounded tunnel opening beneath a shed or against a footing, with a fan of loose sandy spoil at the entrance.

Rooting at the hammock edge

The freshest nosing shows where the lot meets the Jungle Trail hammock or mangrove — the armadillo’s nightly entry from cover.

§5 Structural & Property Risks

What armadillos risk on a wooded lot

Left unaddressed, armadillos reach the parts of a coastal home that are costliest to restore. Here’s what’s at stake.

  1. 1

    Overnight damage to the yard

    Armadillos root for grubs by smell, and the moist, hammock-fed soil of a Wabasso lot lets a single animal tear up turf and beds in a few nights.

  2. 2

    Burrows under structures

    Their burrows undermine footings, slabs, sheds and outbuildings — a structural problem that starts as a hole at the edge of the concrete.

  3. 3

    Bait never solves it

    Because they hunt underground by scent, baited traps fail; the digging continues until directional trapping removes the actual animal.

Humane armadillo removal by Swift Wildlife on the Treasure Coast
§6 Seasonal Activity Insights

Armadillo activity through the year

Between lagoon and hammock the digging climbs through the warm season and surges after summer rains soften the ground and lift grubs into reach. Armadillos forage nearly year-round in this mild setting, so a lawn cleared in the cooler, drier weeks can be rooted again once the rains resoften the hammock-edge soil.

Summer

Digging surges after the rains soften the ground and lift grubs into reach along the hammock edge.

Spring–fall

Warm-season rooting runs hardest; foundation and outbuilding burrows expand.

Winter

Digging eases in the cooler, drier weeks, then resumes once the rains resoften the soil.

§7 Swift Resolution Process

Our humane armadillo removal process in Wabasso

A clear, humane sequence — inspect, remove, seal and restore — documented from first call to follow-up.

1

Track & assess

We identify active burrows and travel routes and evaluate any structural risk to slabs and foundations.

2

Strategic live-trapping

Traps are placed and funneled along the armadillo’s own paths — the technique that actually catches trap-shy diggers.

3

Burrow exclusion

Once removed, burrows near structures are collapsed and blocked to prevent re-denning.

4

Prevention advice

We advise on grub control and barrier options so the yard stops being a feeding ground.

§8 Long-Term Protection Plan

Long-term property protection plan

Removing the armadillo is half the work. These measures keep the next one out of your Wabasso home — worked from the ground up.

Our guarantee

every exclusion we install is backed by our written re-entry guarantee.

  • Treat the lawn for grubs so the moist, hammock-fed soil stops drawing armadillos in.
  • Bury hardware-cloth skirting along sheds, outbuildings and footings to block burrowing underneath.
  • Thin dense ground cover at the hammock and mangrove edges where armadillos enter.
  • Backfill and reinforce each burrow after removal so it is not reoccupied.
§9 Related Services

Related wildlife services in Wabasso

A wooded lot rarely faces just one species — these pair most often with this service.

Reviews

What Indian River County
residents say.

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"

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 10 Stars. Excellent service! Swift safely rescued Ursula the Raccoon and her babies. Choose Swift… you won't be disappointed!

S
Selina Wiggins
Port St. Lucie, FL
★★★★★

"If you need wildlife removed the right way, call Issac! I was terrified of the raccoons sneaking around my place at night, getting into our garbage every night. Until we met Issac and his wife! They are professional, on time, and get straight to the point. Issac explained everything clearly and handled the problem fast with no stress."

Diamond Fowler · Fort Pierce
★★★★★

"Absolutely outstanding service! The team was professional, quick, and incredibly knowledgeable. They safely removed raccoons from my property and made sure everything was secure afterward. I'm beyond impressed with their work!"

Yuriana Escalera · Stuart
★★★★★

"Swift Wildlife Removal is a team of good people, very professional with removal of creatures without harming animals. They helped with raccoons in a rental property and did an excellent job! Highly recommend!"

Norma Ramirez · Port St. Lucie
FAQ

Armadillo Removal in Wabasso — FAQ.

Quick answers — or call us 24/7 for anything else.

How much does armadillo removal cost in Wabasso? +
The property inspection is free. Armadillo Removal is quoted after that whole-property survey — the price reflects the property, the roofline and ground work involved, and any ground, water-edge or cleanup work. You get a written estimate and tiered protection plan before any work begins, with no obligation.
Why do armadillos show up along the hammock edge in Wabasso? +
The Jungle Trail hammock and lagoon mangrove hold soft, moist, grub-rich soil, and armadillos forage out of that cover into adjoining lawns at night. Since the hammock runs right up to many lots, the digging tends to concentrate along the back or side of yards nearest the wooded, mangrove edge.
Is a burrow under my shed or outbuilding a concern? +
Yes. Armadillos dig long tunnels against solid footings, and a burrow under a shed or outbuilding removes the supporting soil, which can lead to settling if left. On lots bordering the hammock these burrows are common. We remove the animal and pack the tunnel before the structure is affected.
Will filling the burrow stop the digging? +
Filling helps only if the animal is gone first. An open burrow left behind is prime real estate for the next armadillo or an opossum. We remove the resident animal, pack the tunnel and, where needed, back it with buried hardware cloth so the spot cannot simply be re-dug and reoccupied.
How do I get rid of armadillos? +
The reliable method is strategic live-trapping along their travel routes and burrow entrances, followed by excluding the burrows. Armadillos are trap-shy, so placement is everything.
What damage do armadillos cause? +
They dig cone-shaped foraging holes across lawns and burrow up to fifteen feet under foundations, slabs, driveways, decks and AC pads, which can cause structural cracking.
Do armadillos carry leprosy? +
Armadillos can carry Mycobacterium leprae, the bacterium linked to leprosy. Transmission to people is rare, but it is a good reason to let a professional handle them.
How quickly can you reach a Wabasso home? +
Same-day service is standard across Wabasso — from Wabasso Beach and the County Road 510 corridor to the Old Dixie Highway lots — and for an urgent situation our response is typically under an hour. A real person answers, live, 24/7.
§12 Service Area

Armadillo Removal across Wabasso

Humane, same-day armadillo removal across Wabasso — the coastal woodland community between the mainland and the barrier island, from Wabasso Beach and County Road 510 to Old Dixie Highway.

Wabasso Wabasso Beach County Road 510 Old Dixie Highway
Free property inspection

Get armadillos out of your Wabasso home.

A no-obligation, whole-property survey of your Wabasso home — the overhead limbs and roofline, the walls and screens, the hammock floor and foundation, and the lagoon or canal bank — with a photo-documented route map and a written protection plan. A real person answers, 24/7.

  • A whole-property survey, roofline to water’s edge
  • Humane armadillo removal, done right
  • A photo-documented wildlife route map
  • Sealed exclusion, guaranteed in writing
Call us · 24/7
(772) 227-1522
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