Moles


Typical Damage/Nuisance Caused:
Raised tunnels and/or mounds of dirt piled up in yard, gardens and sidewalks under-mined.

There is no permanent solution to having moles in your yard or property! However,
Molemen Inc. provides season-long trapping coverage for moles, which allows us to
manage their numbers and the amount of damage caused to your yard. Once we have
trapped the moles in your yard, we then manage any new moles coming in throughout the
season.

We guarantee if you have moles in your yard we can catch them!

Trapping moles is the ONLY real proven method of controlling moles!
Poisons, sonic noise machines, killing your lawn grubs, juicy fruit gum (any flavor of gum
for that matter), human hair, castor oil, broken glass, etc. have little if any affect on
moles.
How do we know these methods don't work? These are some of the ways our
customers have attempted to regulate their mole populations. Once they discovered the
ineffectiveness of these methods, they called the Molemen!

Michigan residents deal with two types of moles, the Eastern Mole (Scalopus aquaticus)
and the Star-Nosed Mole (Condylura cristata). Of these, the majority are the Eastern
Mole (shown above).

In most Michigan yards, the average city-sized lot has 1-3 moles living in it. An acre has
an average of 3-7 moles. We have found these averages to be very accurate, however,
this does not take into account how many moles are in the surrounding properties and
how many may move in throughout the season. For example, if you have a small yard, but
are surrounded by woods, you may have more moles come and go through the year than
if you backed up to a parking lot.

Eastern Mole Facts:

Average 6-8 inches in length and 3-6 ounces in weight once fully grown.
Short silky gray fur with occasional color variation on belly, pointed nose / face, short
tail, long claws.
Moles breed in the later part of winter, have a 4-6 week gestation period, give birth in
early spring, and have 2-6 offspring (luckily in the north they only have one litter a year!)
Moles do not hibernate, they go below the frost line and feed during the winter.

Moles are insectivores and are not rodents, their number one food source is the earth
worm. However, they will eat ants, grubs, centipedes and other ground dwelling insects.

Fun Facts: Moles can dig around 18 feet per hour through solid earth, eat 45-50 lbs of
worms & insects per year, and have a super amount of red-blood cells that hold oxygen
to allow them to live underground!

Photos provided by www.molemeninc.com
Got Moles?
Star-Nosed Mole Facts:
Average 3-5 inches in length, 2-4 ounces in weight once fully grown.
Semi-aquatic; they are generally but not always found living near bodies water such
as lakes, ponds, rivers, and creeks. They can swim, even underwater, and do so
when hunting small fish and water insects
They have probes at the end of their noses (hence star-nosed), used for sensory
purposes