Trusted Pest Control in Voorhees, NJ

Voorhees Township was developed with stormwater management ponds integrated into nearly every neighborhood plan, and while those ponds serve their drainage purpose effectively, they also create some of the most productive mosquito breeding habitat in South Jersey, putting virtually every residential property in the township within mosquito flying range of standing water.

Top pest
mosquitoes
Climate
cold humid
Population
~29,000

Voorhees is a well-planned Camden County township with a reputation for good schools and well-maintained neighborhoods. What most residents discover after their first summer is that the stormwater ponds built into nearly every subdivision are excellent mosquito breeders. Combined with the stink bugs of fall, year-round mouse pressure, and active subterranean termites in the soil, pest management in Voorhees is a genuine seasonal commitment.

The pests active around Voorhees

Mosquitoes
May to October, peaks July to September

Voorhees Township has an unusually high density of stormwater retention ponds relative to its size, and those ponds are the primary mosquito breeding source that makes summer outdoor living challenging in many neighborhoods.

Mice
Year-round, peaks October to March

House mice enter Voorhees homes through gaps around utility penetrations and slab-on-grade foundation edges each fall, moving in from wooded lot buffers and adjacent open spaces.

Stink bugs
September to April

Brown marmorated stink bugs aggregate on Voorhees homes each fall, with the newer vinyl siding and aluminum-framed windows common in the township's 1980s and 1990s construction providing entry gaps.

Eastern subterranean termites
Year-round, swarms March to May

Eastern subterranean termites are active in Camden County and present in Voorhees's suburban homes, with the township's moist, well-irrigated lawn soils supporting active colonies near residential foundations.

Carpenter ants
March to October

Carpenter ants forage into Voorhees homes from wooded lot lines and buffer areas in spring and summer, targeting moisture-damaged wood near roof overhangs and foundation sill plates.

Retention Ponds and Mosquito Season in Voorhees

Voorhees has more stormwater retention ponds per square mile than most comparably sized South Jersey communities, and that design choice has real consequences for mosquito season. Most Voorhees properties sit within a few hundred yards of at least one active pond, and adult mosquitoes breed continuously in these ponds from May through October. The biting pressure in Voorhees backyards during July and August can be significant enough to limit evening outdoor activity without some form of control. Beyond mosquitoes, the township's 1980s and 1990s suburban construction is now old enough that gaps have developed around utility penetrations and window frames, giving stink bugs and mice easy entry each fall. Eastern subterranean termites are active in Camden County's moist soils and are present throughout the township.

Managing Pest Pressure in Voorhees Throughout the Year

Voorhees homeowners who manage pest pressure well take a seasonal approach. Spring means a termite inspection and watching for carpenter ant swarmers near wooded lot lines. May through October means monthly mosquito barrier spray service, which makes a noticeable difference in backyard livability even with ponds nearby. September is stink bug prevention month: sealing window frame gaps and siding penetrations before the fall aggregation begins cuts indoor infestations significantly. October brings the mouse exclusion task: identifying and sealing the foundation and utility gaps that mice use to get inside before temperatures drop. A quarterly perimeter treatment handled by a licensed technician covers ants, occasional cockroaches, and silverfish throughout the year. Most Voorhees families find the monthly mosquito service in summer and quarterly general pest service covers their main needs.

How to prevent pests in Voorhees

  • Use a monthly mosquito barrier spray service from May through October given Voorhees's exceptionally high retention pond density and the mosquito breeding it sustains.
  • Seal window frame and vinyl siding gaps before September to prevent stink bug entry into the 1980s and 1990s construction common in Voorhees.
  • Inspect slab-on-grade foundation edges and utility penetrations before October to prevent mice from entering from wooded lot buffers.
  • Have a termite inspection completed every one to two years given Camden County's active subterranean termite populations and the well-irrigated soils that sustain them.
  • Keep lawn irrigation directed away from the home's foundation to reduce soil moisture that attracts termites and carpenter ants to the building perimeter.

Questions from Voorhees homeowners

Are the stormwater ponds in Voorhees the main reason mosquitoes are so bad here?

Yes. Voorhees has an unusually high concentration of stormwater retention ponds, and they are the primary mosquito breeding source in the township. Because most properties are within flying range of at least one active pond, individual source elimination on your own property only partially addresses the issue. Monthly barrier spray treatments are the most effective backyard-level solution.

How early should I start stink bug prevention in Voorhees?

Start in mid-August in Voorhees, before stink bugs begin aggregating on building exteriors in early September. Sealing window frame gaps, siding joints, and utility penetrations during August gives the caulk time to cure before the bugs arrive. Exterior perimeter treatment applied in early September also helps reduce the number that make it inside.

Do termites prefer irrigated suburban lawns in Voorhees?

The well-irrigated soils common in Voorhees's maintained suburban lawns do keep soil moisture levels higher than unirrigated areas, which can sustain larger subterranean termite colony populations close to the home. Directing irrigation heads away from the foundation and maintaining drainage that moves water away from the structure reduces termite attraction to the immediate perimeter.

Reviewed by Sandra Whitfield, Integrated Pest Management & Pesticide Safety Specialist, PestRemovalUSA, PestRemovalUSA

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