Texas has a bird problem most of the country doesn't: great-tailed grackles. They are not pigeons. They're large, loud, intensely intelligent black birds with long tails, and they form massive evening roosts at shopping centers, grocery anchors, parking structures, and any well-lit commercial site with a few trees nearby. Once a grackle flock decides your property is home, sonic devices, plastic owls, and one-time hazing won't shift them. They're the single most-asked-about pest bird in Texas, and the honest answer is that grackles take layered, persistent work — exclusion where it's feasible, habitat modification, laser and sound hazing on a real schedule, and follow-up visits until the roost relocates. We have crews who do this and don't quit on the first visit.
Beyond grackles, Texas warehouses and distribution centers — the HEB, Walmart, Amazon, and Gulf logistics networks across DFW, Houston, and San Antonio — deal with the same rock pigeon, house sparrow, and European starling pressure as the rest of the country, but amplified by Gulf humidity, hurricane and hailstorm exposure, and the size of Texas industrial real estate. Loading dock canopies, high-bay rafters, rooftop unit clusters, and conveyor catwalks are where birds nest, and that's where we install netting, spikes, and exclusion hardware specified to survive Texas weather.
Rid-A-Bird is headquartered in Phoenix, and we've mobilized crews into Texas regularly for commercial projects across Houston metro, DFW, Austin, San Antonio, Corpus Christi, El Paso, and the Panhandle. We don't have a Texas office, and we'll tell you that up front. What we have is 35+ years of commercial bird exclusion experience, a willingness to drive equipment and lifts where the work is, and pricing that makes sense on multi-site DC rollouts and major shopping-center or industrial scopes.
Layered programs for shopping centers and parking-lot trees — laser hazing, sound pressure, habitat trimming, and persistent return visits to push grackle roosts off the property.
Heavy-duty interior netting with zippered light access for the Texas distribution-center footprint — HEB, big-box, and Amazon-scale facilities across DFW, Houston, and San Antonio.
Floor-to-canopy netting and screening across loading dock openings to block the primary path pigeons and sparrows use to access warehouse interiors.
Spike, netting, and screen work on Gulf petrochemical and oilfield infrastructure — pipe racks, control buildings, tank rims, and equipment shelters.
Stainless hardware, UV-stabilized netting, and fastener specs chosen to survive Texas hail, Gulf wind loads, and intense summer UV — not the lightweight kits that fail in year two.
Lift work scheduled around shopping-center traffic and DC shift patterns. Evening, overnight, and weekend installs so receiving, shipping, and customer traffic never stop.