Moth control in Inwood: what to know
Inwood sits at Manhattan's northern tip beside Inwood Hill Park — the only natural forest left on the island — so homes here see more wildlife pressure (squirrels, raccoons) alongside the usual urban rodents and roaches.
Pre-war apartment stock along Dyckman Street and Seaman Avenue has the deep voids and shared plumbing that let cockroaches and mice move between units.
The park edge means seasonal mosquito and tick pressure for ground-floor and garden apartments.
Signs you need moth control
- Irregular holes in wool sweaters, coats, or suits, often in folded or stored garments
- Silky webbing or small case-like tubes on fabric, especially in closets and drawers
- Small cream-coloured larvae or tiny moths near closets, chests, or wool storage
- Damage concentrated in natural fibres — wool, cashmere, silk, fur — with synthetics untouched
- Thinning or bald patches in area rugs, especially where they've sat rolled up or undisturbed
How we treat moth control in Inwood
Even well-kept Upper East Side buildings face moth pressure that has nothing to do with cleanliness and everything to do with what's in the closet. Clothing moths — the webbing clothes moth and casemaking clothes moth are the two species behind almost every infestation — feed on wool, cashmere, silk, fur, and other natural fibres, and a neighbourhood with this much stored winter clothing, area rugs, and cedar-chest storage is exactly the environment they need.
Larvae, not adult moths, do the damage: adults live only a couple of weeks and don't feed at all, so seeing moths flying around a closet is really a sign the damage was already done by the larvae that developed there. Infestations concentrate in undisturbed storage — a wool coat that hasn't been worn all season, a folded sweater at the back of a drawer, an area rug rolled up in a closet.
Local landmarks & coverage
We serve all of Inwood and the surrounding Manhattan area — including Inwood Hill Park, Dyckman Street, Isham Park — across ZIP codes 10034, 10040.