Wildlife Command Center

Wildlife Command Center Wildlife Command Center is dedicated to saving people from hostile animal encounters in the urban environment.
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Our staff of highly skilled, incredibly trained wildlife technicians can resolve any human vs wildlife conflict. Wildlife Command Center will fix damage to your home caused by wildlife. Services offered by our wildlife professionals include offsite repair and replacement, fascia repair and replacement, replacement of insulation damaged by animal chewing, removal of urine and feces droppings, exclu

sion services, animal capture and removal, odor control, decontamination of animal urine and feces. Bat Control, Bee Control, Bees Nest Control, Bear Control, Bird Control and Cleanup, Chipmunk Control, Coyote Control, Dead Animal Control, Deer Control, Feral Cat removal, Geese Control, Goose Control, Groundhog Control, Mice Control, Mole Control, Mouse Control, Opossum Control, Pigeon Control, Possum Control, Raccoon Control, Rabbit Control, Rat Control, Rodent Control, Skunk Control, Snake Control, and Squirrel Control, Animal removal services provided these expert Wildlife Removal Technicians include:
Bat Removal, Bee Removal, Bees Nest Removal, Bear Removal, Bird Removal and Cleanup, Chipmunk Removal, Coyote Removal, Dead Animal Removal, Deer Removal, Feral Cat Removal, Geese Removal, Goose Removal, Groundhog Removal, Mice Removal, Mole Removal, Mouse Removal, Opossum Removal, Pigeon Removal, Possum Removal, Rabbit Removal, Raccoon Removal, Rat Removal, Rodent Removal, Skunk Removal, Snake Removal, and Squirrel Removal, Wildlife Command Center will remove all nuisance animals and make your home safe once more.

🦝 Wildlife Command Center in Action – Opossum RemovalAnother day, another wildlife situation handled the right way. This...
03/17/2026

🦝 Wildlife Command Center in Action – Opossum Removal

Another day, another wildlife situation handled the right way. This time Malichi and Tim from the Wildlife Command Center team responded to a call from a commercial property where an opossum had found its way into the basement of a building.

Basements can be attractive to wildlife because they offer darkness, shelter, and protection from weather and predators. In this case the opossum had simply wandered into a place it didn’t belong. While opossums are generally harmless and would rather avoid people, having one inside a commercial building is obviously not something businesses want to deal with.

Malichi and Tim approached the situation calmly and professionally, safely capturing and removing the opossum without injury to the animal or risk to the people working in the building. Once secured, the animal was relocated and the team checked the area to make sure there were no additional wildlife concerns or entry points that could allow animals back inside.

This is exactly what the Wildlife Command Center team does every day — solving wildlife problems quickly while keeping both people and animals safe.

When wildlife shows up where it doesn’t belong, it’s good to know there’s a team ready to handle it.

I rescue people from wild animals.







Bigfoot, Sasquash or Yeti what ever you call him, I'm really looking forward to getting this film distributed, was a lot...
02/24/2026

Bigfoot, Sasquash or Yeti what ever you call him, I'm really looking forward to getting this film distributed, was a lot of fun to make, will be even more fun to share with
everyone!

Raf Adame, Michael Kearney, & Drew Van Pearson. DRONE DOWN plays on Sunday, 2/27, at 5:30pm, Galaxy Theatre at the Boulevard Mall.Tickets at. https://m.bpt....

🐦 How 60 Birds Became a Continental Problem — A Wildlife Command Center Perspective 🏠Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and...
02/24/2026

🐦 How 60 Birds Became a Continental Problem — A Wildlife Command Center Perspective 🏠

Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and this is one of the clearest examples of how a single human decision can reshape an entire ecosystem.

In 1890, a man named Eugene Schieffelin released 60 European starlings into Central Park in New York City. His goal wasn’t agriculture, conservation, or science. It was art. He wanted every bird mentioned in the works of William Shakespeare to exist in North America.

Shakespeare mentioned the starling once.
In one play.
In one line.

From those 60 birds, we now have an estimated 200 million European starlings across North America.

National Invasive Species Awareness Week starts today, and the starling is one of the most visible, loud, and destructive examples of why introductions matter.

European starlings are aggressive cavity nesters. They move into tree holes, vents, soffits, building crevices, and birdhouses — the same spaces needed by at least 85 native North American bird species. The problem is simple: starlings are bigger, more aggressive, and they start nesting earlier than most native birds.

What that looks like in real life is something we see constantly. A pair of Eastern bluebirds spends days building a nest. Then starlings arrive, destroy it, and take over. That same story plays out with tree swallows, Purple Martins, woodpeckers, kestrels, and screech owls. Starlings have contributed to population declines in at least 27 native cavity-nesting species.

A single starling pair can raise two to three broods per year, producing 8 to 18 birds every season. The USDA removes over a million starlings annually — and the population still doesn’t decline.

Here’s the uncomfortable irony: starlings are intelligent birds. They can mimic speech, alarms, and other bird songs. Mozart even kept a pet starling, wrote music for it, and held a funeral when it died.

A highly intelligent bird, released for art, has displaced dozens of native species.

🐦 How homeowners can protect native cavity nesters:
• Use birdhouses with 1.5-inch entrance holes (too small for starlings, perfect for bluebirds and swallows)
• Remove starling nesting material immediately — starlings are not protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act
• Use starling-resistant nest box designs
• Avoid suet feeders in spring, which starlings dominate
• Delay opening Purple Martin housing until scouts arrive

Sixty birds. One park. One Shakespeare reference.
Two hundred million starlings later.

I save people from wild animals — and sometimes that means protecting native wildlife from the consequences of human choices.

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🐦 **When Your Attic Starts Tweeting, It’s Not Cute — It’s a Problem** 🏠Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and if you’re hea...
02/24/2026

🐦 **When Your Attic Starts Tweeting, It’s Not Cute — It’s a Problem** 🏠

Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and if you’re hearing scratching in the attic, fluttering above the ceiling, or full-on birdsong coming from inside your house, your attic may have just become a nesting site for a **European starling**. Yes… if your attic is tweeting again, that’s your warning sign.

European starlings are aggressive cavity nesters. Once they find an opening — rooflines, vents, soffits, or gable gaps — they move in fast. Inside an attic, they build nests out of insulation, debris, and anything they can grab. You’ll hear wing flapping, constant movement, chirping, and loud singing as they establish territory and attract mates. This doesn’t quiet down on its own — it escalates.

Starlings nesting in attics create serious issues. Their droppings contaminate insulation, their nesting material blocks airflow, and they introduce mites and parasites into the home. During nesting season, removing adults without addressing eggs or chicks leads to dead birds inside the structure, odor problems, flies, and repeat invasions. Sealing holes too early makes it worse, not better.

Homeowners always come first. The solution is inspection, species identification, nest management, cleanup, and **proper exclusion** so the attic stops being attractive to birds. This isn’t a DIY job, especially once nesting has begun. The longer you wait, the louder, messier, and more expensive it becomes.

If your attic is scratching, fluttering, or singing back at you — don’t ignore it. That’s wildlife telling you it’s already moved in.

I save people from wild animals — by keeping wildlife out of structures and homes peaceful again.

**Keywords:**
European starling attic, birds nesting in attic, attic scratching noises, birds fluttering in attic, starling nest removal, wildlife control birds, attic bird problem, nuisance birds in house

**Hashtags:**

🐿️ **Squirrels Outside Are Fine — Squirrels Inside Are a Problem** 🏠Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and let’s clear some...
02/19/2026

🐿️ **Squirrels Outside Are Fine — Squirrels Inside Are a Problem** 🏠

Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and let’s clear something up. Squirrels running around your yard, climbing trees, and chasing each other across the fence? Totally normal. That’s just wildlife being wildlife. But when squirrels cross the line and start running through your **house**, attic, walls, or pantry — that’s no longer cute, funny, or harmless.

Especially in **spring**, squirrels aren’t just exploring. They’re nesting and raising young. If a squirrel is inside your home right now, there’s a very real chance babies are already hidden in your attic, walls, or ceiling. That’s when the damage ramps up fast. Squirrels chew constantly. Wires, wood, insulation, food packaging — nothing is off-limits. I’ve seen pantries destroyed, wiring stripped bare, and attics turned into shredded nesting zones in a matter of days.

Letting squirrels roam inside is not doing them or you any favors. Pantry food gets contaminated. Droppings and urine spread bacteria. Chewed wiring becomes a serious fire risk. And when babies are involved, sealing holes without a plan leads to dead animals, terrible odors, flies, and repeat break-ins as mom tries to get back to her young.

Homeowners always come first. The right approach is inspection first, then locating young, removing the squirrels properly, cleaning contamination, and securing the home so it doesn’t happen again. Quick fixes and DIY attempts usually make things worse, especially during baby season.

It’s okay to enjoy squirrels from the window or the backyard. It is **not** okay to share your pantry, attic, or walls with them.

I save people from wild animals — by keeping wildlife where it belongs and homes safe where they matter most.

If you’re hearing scratching, chewing, or seeing signs of entry, spring is the time to act — not wait.

**Wildlife Command Center – 70-Point Spring Wildlife Inspection for Squirrels**Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and sprin...
02/17/2026

**Wildlife Command Center – 70-Point Spring Wildlife Inspection for Squirrels**

Michael Bare Hands Beran here — and spring is when squirrel problems explode if they’re missed early. 🐿️🌱 That’s why Wildlife Command Center runs a **70-point wildlife inspection specifically focused on squirrels** and the damage they cause to homes in spring. This isn’t a quick walk-around. It’s a top-to-bottom evaluation designed to find problems **before** babies die in attics, wiring gets chewed, or repairs turn expensive.

In spring, eastern gray squirrels are actively raising young. If a squirrel is in your attic right now, there are likely babies present. Sealing holes without locating nests leads to dead animals, odor, flies, and repeat invasions. Our inspection is built to prevent exactly that.

The 70-point inspection covers:
• Rooflines, ridge vents, soffits, fascia, and gable vents
• Attic entry points, chew marks, rub marks, and nesting zones
• Thermal imaging to locate hidden young
• Interior attic damage to insulation, wiring, ductwork, and framing
• Exterior travel routes like trees, fences, and utility lines
• Chimneys, dormers, siding gaps, and construction defects
• Evidence of pheromones, urine staining, and contamination
• Secondary risks like fire hazards and structural compromise

We identify **how they got in, where they’re nesting, how long they’ve been there, and what needs to happen in the correct order**. Inspection first. Species identification second. Baby location third. Removal, sanitation, and exclusion last. Skipping steps is why squirrel jobs fail.

Homeowners always come first. This inspection protects your house, your sleep, and your wallet — while preventing unnecessary wildlife deaths during baby season.

I save people from wild animals — and in spring, that starts with finding the problem before it multiplies.

**Keywords:**
spring squirrel inspection, squirrel attic damage, wildlife inspection St Louis, squirrel baby season, attic squirrel removal, humane wildlife control, nuisance wildlife inspection

**Hashtags:**

No matter how tough, mean, or fearless you think your dog is — **an urban raccoon is a fight your pet is not going to wi...
02/07/2026

No matter how tough, mean, or fearless you think your dog is — **an urban raccoon is a fight your pet is not going to win.** Period.

That image of a pitbull squared up with a raccoon tells a story I see play out far too often in city neighborhoods. People underestimate raccoons because they’re smaller, masked, and look almost cartoonish. But an urban raccoon is a hardened survivor. It has lived around traffic, people, dogs, fences, garbage, tight spaces, and constant pressure. That animal has claws designed for climbing and fighting, teeth made for crushing, and a mindset that switches instantly into survival mode when cornered. This is not a fair matchup.

When a raccoon feels threatened — especially in a yard, garage, porch, or near food — it does not retreat politely. It fights dirty. Face, eyes, ears, legs. I’ve seen dogs far bigger than raccoons come out of these encounters with deep lacerations, torn ears, infected bite wounds, and punctures that don’t look bad at first… until they swell, abscess, and turn into a serious medical emergency.

And here’s the part nobody likes to talk about: **your wallet will not win either.**
Emergency vet visits aren’t cheap. Sedation, stitches, antibiotics, rabies protocols, wound flushing, aftercare — it adds up fast. What started as “my dog chased a raccoon” turns into hundreds or thousands of dollars, plus pain, stress, and recovery time for your pet.

The smartest move isn’t testing how tough your dog is. The smartest move is preventing the fight altogether.

If you know you have an urban raccoon hanging around your property — daytime sightings, aggressive behavior, denning near the house, food raiding, or confrontations with pets — that is your warning sign. That’s when you call professionals who know how to handle the situation safely and correctly **before** someone gets hurt.

At Wildlife Command Center, homeowners come first. We remove problem raccoons humanely, professionally, and with a plan that protects your pets, your family, and your property. No chaos. No unnecessary risk. No emergency vet bills because someone underestimated wildlife.

I save people from wild animals — and that includes saving your dog from a fight it never should have been in.

If you’re seeing raccoon activity, don’t wait for blood, stitches, or panic. Handle it the right way, the first time.

[https://www.youtube.com/](https://www.youtube.com/)

🎉 **MILESTONE MOMENT for Wildlife Command Center** 🎉Today, **February 7, 2026**, Wildlife Command Center officially hit ...
02/07/2026

🎉 **MILESTONE MOMENT for Wildlife Command Center** 🎉

Today, **February 7, 2026**, Wildlife Command Center officially hit **167,500 subscribers on YouTube** — and I don’t take a single one of you for granted. This is a huge moment, and I want to say THANK YOU to every single person who has watched, shared, commented, learned, argued, laughed, or grown with us along the way.

They say **2026 is the Year of the Horse**, a year symbolizing strength, endurance, freedom, and forward motion — and honestly, that couldn’t fit this journey any better. This channel was built on hard work, grit, long nights, early mornings, and real-world wildlife situations that don’t come with a script. What you see is real. The rescues are real. The danger is real. The responsibility is real.

From hawks and owls to opossums, turtles, rodents, and everything in between — this channel exists to show what wildlife work actually looks like when homeowners come first and animals are handled with respect and skill. Education matters. Experience matters. And truth matters, even when it’s messy.

This community has grown into something powerful. You’ve helped spread awareness, protect wildlife, and keep people safer in the process. That’s not just numbers — that’s impact.

As always, I’ll keep doing what I’ve always done:
**I save people from wild animals.**

Here’s to an incredible Year of the Horse, to growth, momentum, and continuing to move forward together. Thank you for riding this trail with me.

👉 [https://www.youtube.com/](https://www.youtube.com/)

Let’s keep going. 💪🦅🐢🐀

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt30051957/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk
01/25/2026

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt30051957/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk

Wildlife Command Center: Created by Michael Beran. With Michael Beran, Jenna L. Heckethorn, Corrine Bartlett, Sara Perfetto. Follow the courageous Bare Hands Beran as he leads daring animal rescues, showcasing the channel's commitment to wildlife conservation.

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4089 Country Club Drive
Imperial, MO
63052

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Monday 1am - 11pm
Tuesday 1am - 11pm
Wednesday 1am - 11pm
Thursday 1am - 11pm
Friday 1am - 11pm
Saturday 1am - 11pm
Sunday 1am - 11pm

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+13143998272

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