Rodent control in Post, TX.
Post is the Garza County seat southeast of Lubbock, a small South Plains city where the combination of older construction, agricultural surroundings, and proximity to the Caprock escarpment creates a specific rodent pressure profile that includes Norway rats, house mice, and the field mice common at the edge of the escarpment terrain.
Call (806) 207-3665
Rodent control in Post, TX serves Garza County's county seat, where older residential construction, active oil field and agricultural operations in the surrounding county, and the Caprock terrain that runs along the city's east edge create a mixed-species rodent environment.
Caprock escarpment terrain and Garza County farming: Post's mixed-species rodent profile including packrats, house mice, and Norway rats.
Property age determines treatment scope.
Post's position at the edge of the Caprock escarpment creates terrain-specific rodent pressure. The rocky escarpment terrain along the city's eastern edge supports packrat (woodrat) populations that occasionally enter residential and outbuilding spaces, a species profile different from the house mice and Norway rats typical of the Lubbock flatlands. House mice are still the dominant residential call, but packrat activity is an occasional secondary finding in properties backing to the escarpment terrain.
The agricultural and oil field operations in Garza County around Post create the typical South Plains Norway rat pressure near the city's agricultural edge. We dispatch from Lubbock to Post in approximately 40–45 minutes.
Garza County's Permian Basin oilfield activity creates a secondary rodent pressure dynamic in the Post area that's distinct from the Caprock escarpment packrat pressure on the city's east side. Oilfield infrastructure, pump stations, pipeline corridors, equipment yards, creates the protected, year-round harborage conditions that sustain Norway rat colonies independent of seasonal agricultural cycles. Post is positioned at the intersection of three distinct rodent pressure sources: the Caprock terrain to the east supporting packrats, the Garza County farming on the plateau supporting field mice and Norway rats, and the oilfield infrastructure throughout the county generating additional Norway rat colonies near active operations. This three-source environment is why Post properties often require species identification before treatment, the correct program depends on which of the three sources is driving the specific infestation.
Rodent control in Post: residential, oilfield, and Caprock-adjacent packrat programs.
Each street has its own story.
Pricing for Post properties.
Ranges based on property age and scope.
| Service | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Inspection (standalone) | Free | Same-day available from Lubbock |
| Rat or mouse treatment | $280–$750 | Species and property size dependent |
| Exclusion sealing | $300–$900 | Materials and entry-point count |
| Attic cleanup | $400–$1,000 | Infestation extent dependent |
| Emergency / after-hours | $200–$400 dispatch | Plus treatment cost |
All quotes confirmed before work starts. No surprise invoices.
Common questions from Post residents about the area's unique rodent environment.
Are packrats from the Caprock escarpment a distinct problem from house mice near Post?
Do oilfield operations in Garza County affect rodent pressure near Post?
Can a property near Post have both packrats and house mice at the same time?
Is same-day service available in Post?
Is there a travel fee for Post service?
What does rodent treatment cost in Post?
Do you provide free inspections in Post?
Don’t Wait, Rodent Damage Compounds Daily
Common gaps. Repeating across the block.
Same-day dispatch from Lubbock to Post for daytime calls. Open 24/7.
Call (806) 207-3665Questions first? Send a message and we'll call you back.