How we handle pests in Primm
Pest work in Primm starts with looking, not spraying: because the open-desert setting makes this a scorpion- and rodent-heavy, low-moisture profile, so the inspection prioritizes desert-adapted pests and raw-interface entry, we inspect first and let what we find drive the plan, which is how Primm treatment stays specific rather than generic — and you get a straight summary of the situation.
Because Primm sits at the Nevada–California state line on I-15, about 41 miles south of Henderson, the Primm starting point differs from a generic valley route in exactly one way that matters: The arid I-15 corridor setting keeps moisture pests low while sustaining desert rodents and scorpions.
Here in Primm the plan follows from the reality that sparse, spread-out housing with significant desert contact concentrates the entry concern, so treatment is built around the arid-interface reality rather than an irrigated-suburb model. You reach a person by phone rather than a form, and pressing Primm problems — a nest by a doorway, a sudden invasion — are moved up when you mention them on the call.