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Mole Control in Rancho Cucamonga, CA — No Poisons

Professional mole control in Rancho Cucamonga. No poisons, no chemicals — safe for dogs, cats, and children. 60-day guarantee.

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Mole Control in Rancho Cucamonga Without Poison

Rancho Cucamonga's well-irrigated residential neighborhoods and alluvial soil create excellent conditions for the broad-footed mole. The city's mature residential areas — particularly in Alta Loma, Etiwanda, and the established neighborhoods along the base of the San Gabriel Mountains — have the high earthworm populations that moles depend on, making them prime mole territory throughout the year.

Mole activity in Rancho Cucamonga is often confused with gopher activity because both pests create soil disturbance. The key difference: gophers leave large fan-shaped mounds, while moles leave raised surface ridges and smaller volcano-shaped molehills. If you're seeing surface ridges running across your lawn rather than large dirt mounds, moles are the more likely culprit.

⚠ Mole Bait Warning
Zinc phosphide mole bait is toxic to dogs and has no antidote. Dogs are attracted to worm-shaped bait. If you have dogs, trapping is the only safe option. ASPCA Poison Control: (888) 426-4435
✓ Trapping: Nothing on the Surface
Professional traps are set underground inside the mole's tunnel. No chemicals, no bait, no exposure risk for your pets.

Areas We Serve in Rancho Cucamonga

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Schedule Mole Control in Rancho Cucamonga Today

Our recommended provider is Rodent Guys — chemical-free trapping specialists serving Southern California since 2011.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are moles common in Rancho Cucamonga?

Moles occur throughout Rancho Cucamonga's residential neighborhoods, particularly in areas with consistent irrigation and loam or clay-loam soil that supports high earthworm populations. They are less common than gophers but cause distinct lawn damage when present.

How do I tell mole damage from gopher damage?

Gophers leave large fan-shaped dirt mounds — often 6 to 12 inches across — appearing suddenly overnight. Moles leave raised surface ridges running across the lawn and smaller, rounder molehills. Gopher mounds appear without a visible opening. Mole tunnels are visible as raised ridges in the turf surface.

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