Cricket control in Ditmas Park: what to know
Ditmas Park is famous for its intact Victorian houses — freestanding wood-frame homes with large yards, mature trees and original foundations that are quite different from the urban apartment stock nearby. This housing type brings more ant, stinging-insect and carpenter-ant pressure than denser areas.
The Cortelyou Road commercial strip is a lively restaurant and café corridor; food-waste pressure from the strip feeds rodent populations that enter the surrounding Victorian homes through gaps in old foundations and wood-frame siding.
Mature tree canopy over the residential streets means squirrel and bird pressure for attic and soffit entry points, and seasonal stinging-insect nest building in the large overhanging eaves of the Victorian homes.
Signs you need cricket control
- Chirping at night (house crickets) coming from basements or walls
- Humpbacked, long-legged crickets jumping in basements, cellars or bathrooms
- Holes or damage in stored fabric, cardboard or paper in basement storage
- Crickets concentrated in damp, dark ground-floor and below-grade areas
How we treat cricket control in Ditmas Park
Crickets — especially the humpbacked camel cricket (often called a 'spider cricket' or 'cave cricket') — are a common but under-treated NYC pest. They thrive in the damp basements, cellars, crawl spaces and ground-floor units that older New York buildings have in abundance, and their chirping and jumping make them especially unwelcome indoors.
Camel crickets don't chirp but they jump erratically when disturbed and feed on fabric, cardboard and stored items in basements. House crickets are drawn to warmth and light. Both signal a moisture and entry-point problem, which is why treatment that ignores the underlying conditions never holds.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Ditmas Park and the surrounding Brooklyn area — including Victorian houses of Ditmas Park, Cortelyou Road, Beverley Road, Albemarle Road — across ZIP codes 11218.