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Pet Odor and Stain Removal

Odors can be down right offensive. People in the United States provide homes to more than 100,000,000 pets. The primary pet problem is urine.

If only we were all this lucky!

Urine from pets can soak through the carpet, into the padding and down to the floor. This type of problem is sincerely too severe for household products. It must be dealt with by the professionals.

Carpet Cleaning Professionals today have the right chemicals availilbe to break down the alkaline salts contained in pet urine (the stinky stuff). Using the right products to break down alkaline salts is very important. Urine, is one of the most difficult unpleasant odors to remove. Urine, when excreted by the family pet, is at body temperature causing it to penetrate the carpet fiber. Gravity naturally pulls the urine down through the carpet, through the pad to the sub flooring, or to the concrete. So literally each layer becomes affected. Often, when a small problem is observed on the surface, not always, but often a closer investigation reveals a much larger problem below. Understanding the nature and habits of Family Pets:

  • Understanding the family pets nature and habits will give us important clues in locating the source of the problem.
  • Males tend to urinate around the perimeter of the room saturating vertical surfaces like the legs of furniture, walls, woodwork, door frames and draperies.
  • Female pets tend to prefer open areas or the corners of a room.
  • Pets that have not been neutered will actively mark their territories by spraying a little bit here and a little bit there.
  • Neutered and Spayed animals traditionally will tend to confine their contamination to open areas.
  • Cat odor situations are more challenging than dogs because of the mobility factor. Cats can cause problems dogs can't because of the size and places they can fit.

Some questions you can expect to hear from us would be:

  1. Did you inherit the problem?
  2. Do you have more than one pet?
  3. What kind of pet(s) do you have?
  4. How old is he/she?
  5. What size?
  6. What have you tried on the problem area(s)?
  7. Is your pet confined to one area, or does it have the run of the house?

We will make an assessment of the contamination by perfoming a skill inspection. Once we've asked some good questions to help us judge how much contamination is present in your floor and determined the problem severity, we'll use appropriate methods, tools and chemistry to help you remedy the problem.