
Bird of Prey Pest Control
Across All of Leinster
Twelve counties. Sixty towns. One specialist team of licensed falconers. From Georgian Dublin rooftops to the Cooley coastline, from Wexford harbour walls to Athlone's Shannon bridges — we deter pigeons, seagulls and starlings the humane way, using trained Harris Hawks.
Choose your county
Every county page is written from on-the-ground experience — local bird-pressure patterns (coastal gulls, urban pigeons, agri rooks and starlings), the right Hawking service for the site, and town-by-town coverage.

Carlow
County Carlow is classic inland Leinster — market towns ringed by tillage and grazing land, with Victorian and Georgian shopfronts in the centres and modern retail parks on the edges. That mix produces a steady pattern of bird-pressure: feral pigeons in town centres, rooks and jackdaws on rural farmsteads, and starling roosts in agricultural stores. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Dublin
County Dublin runs from the Liffey quays out to the open sea at Howth and Dún Laoghaire, and inland to the M50 commuter belt. Bird-pressure here is the most varied in Ireland: feral pigeons across the city centre, herring and lesser black-backed gulls along the coast, and starling roosts under bridges and warehouses. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Kildare
County Kildare is Ireland's thoroughbred country — internationally known stud farms beside fast-growing commuter towns and pharma parks. The bird-pressure reflects that split: feral pigeons in the commuter towns, jackdaws and rooks around stud farms, and pigeon fouling on heritage and ecclesiastical buildings. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Kilkenny
County Kilkenny is one of Ireland's most heritage-rich counties — medieval city core, Norman abbeys, Georgian estates and stone-walled rural villages. Birds love that stone fabric: pigeon fouling on medieval limestone, jackdaws in chimney stacks, and rural rook and starling pressure on tillage and dairy farms. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Laois
County Laois is mostly working farmland — tillage, dairy, beef and sheep, with compact market towns serving the wider catchment. Bird-pressure is dominated by rook and jackdaw pressure around grain stores, starling roosts in dairy yards, and pigeons in market-town squares. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Longford
County Longford is mostly working farmland — tillage, dairy, beef and sheep, with compact market towns serving the wider catchment. Bird-pressure is dominated by rooks and jackdaws across the lowland farmland, starlings around the Shannon callows and pigeon fouling on town-centre listed buildings. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Louth
County Louth fronts the Irish Sea with two of the east coast's busiest ports, Drogheda and Dundalk. The combination of working waterfronts and historic town centres produces concentrated bird-pressure: herring and lesser black-backed gulls along the Drogheda and Dundalk coastlines, feral pigeons in the historic town centres, and starling roosts in port-side warehousing. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Meath
County Meath is the Royal County — Tara, the Boyne valley and Newgrange on one side, fast-growing commuter towns like Ashbourne, Ratoath and Navan on the other. The bird-pressure mirrors that contrast: pigeon fouling on Norman castles and round towers, rooks across the Boyne valley tillage, and commuter-town pigeon and starling pressure. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Offaly
County Offaly sits at the heart of the country — Georgian Birr, the Grand Canal, distilleries, vast tillage plains and the Slieve Blooms. Bird-pressure here is shaped by both farmland and heritage streetscape: rooks and jackdaws on the central plain farmland, pigeons on Georgian and heritage streetscapes, and starlings in canal-side former mills. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Westmeath
County Westmeath is Ireland's lakeland — Athlone bridging the Shannon, Mullingar on Lough Owel, and a rural hinterland of dairy and tillage. That landscape brings unusual bird-pressure: feral pigeons in Athlone and Mullingar town centres, gulls drawn inland to the lakes, rooks across farmland and starlings around dairy yards. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Wexford
County Wexford runs from the herring-gull rooftops of Wexford and Rosslare to the strawberry, grain and dairy farms of the inland river valleys. The county sees year-round bird-pressure: herring gulls along the Wexford and Rosslare coastline, feral pigeons in heritage town centres, and starling and rook pressure on the county's strawberry, grain and dairy farms. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.

Wicklow
County Wicklow is the Garden of Ireland — high mountains, coastal towns and commuter suburbs all within thirty miles of each other. Bird-pressure follows the geography: herring and lesser black-backed gulls along Bray, Greystones and Arklow, feral pigeons in commuter towns and pigeon fouling on heritage estates. We've worked across the county for years and we tailor each programme to the actual species, the site and the surrounding land use — never a one-size-fits-all spray.
Genuinely local
We're on the road across Leinster every working day. No subcontracting, no surprises.
Humane & licensed
Fully licensed falconers, conservation-trained, with non-lethal methods suitable for hospitals, schools and protected structures.
Honest lead times
Free on-site quote within 2–4 working days anywhere in Leinster. Fixed-price quotes, no extras.
