Bend.

Population 105,000 at 3,623 feet on the high desert side of the Cascades. The climate is semi-arid, the soil is volcanic, and the dominant species are not the Norway and roof rats of the wet side. Deer mice lead here — by call volume, by population density, and by public-health weight. Pack rats hold the juniper-sage edges. Lava-rock voids complicate exclusion in a way no other Oregon city has to deal with.

Bend dispatch · (541) 422-4462
County
Deschutes · also Redmond, Sisters, La Pine
Climate
Semi-arid steppe · BSk · 11 in/yr rain · 24 in snow
Dominant species
Deer mouse · pack rat
Peak pressure window
October — March
§ 01 / Local Pressure

How rodents pressure Bend specifically.

A field reading of the city's geography, building stock, and the patterns we observe in our dispatch data.

Bend's rodent ecology is the most distinct in the state. Cross the Cascades and you leave the marine-climate species behind: the Norway rat that owns Portland's combined sewer is rare here, and the roof rat is rarer still. What you get instead is the deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus) and the bushy-tailed pack rat (Neotoma cinerea), both of which are adapted to cold, dry winters and to a landscape that hides them well.

The lava-rock problem.

Most of Bend sits on basaltic lava flows from the Newberry Volcano. Below a few feet of soil, the substrate is honeycombed with vesicles, cracks, and small voids — perfect rodent infrastructure. A standard exclusion approach that traces ingress to a single hole in a foundation will not catch what is, in many older Bend houses, a network of paths through the bedrock itself. Effective Bend operators learn to seal the building envelope rather than chase the source.

In a wet-side house you find the hole. In a Bend house, you assume there is no single hole — and seal the whole envelope as if a hundred small ones exist.

The hantavirus question.

The deer mouse is the primary reservoir for Sin Nombre hantavirus in the western United States. The actual incidence of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in Deschutes County is low — a handful of confirmed cases per decade — but it is not zero, and the risk is real enough that the standard remediation guidance differs from west-side rodent cleanup. Wet droppings with a 10% bleach solution, let dwell 10 minutes, wipe with disposable cloths, never sweep or vacuum dry. This applies in any Bend cleanup.

Building stock notes.

Old Bend (the area around Drake Park and Mirror Pond) is largely pre-1950 housing, with the standard rim-joist and crawl-vent leakage patterns plus the lava-rock overlay. NorthWest Crossing and the newer developments (Tetherow, Brookswood, Sun Lakes) are tight builds — most ingress in those neighborhoods is at the garage-to-house pass-through and the gas service entry. Awbrey Butte is the wildlife corridor: pack rats, deer mice, and the occasional ground squirrel use the juniper-sage edges.

What to do before an operator arrives.

Pull every cardboard box off the garage floor and onto shelving. Pack rats nest in stored material — they will move into a Bend garage in October and stay through March. Walk the exterior and look for "middens" — piles of twigs, scat, and stolen objects (literal pack-rat behaviour) near foundation edges. If you find a midden, treat the whole area, not the pile.


§ 02 / Seasonal Pressure

When each species peaks in Bend, by month.

Based on operator call-volume data across the area, 2022 – 2026.

Bend · monthly pressure index

LOW
HIGH
Species
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Deer mouseP. maniculatus
Pack ratN. cinerea
House mouseM. musculus
Norway ratR. norvegicus

§ 03 / Neighborhoods

Where Bend calls us from most.

Sorted by relative pressure based on three years of dispatch data.

Old Bend / Drake ParkHigh
Awbrey ButteHigh
NorthWest CrossingMed
Old Mill DistrictMed
TetherowMed
Sun LakesMed
BrookswoodMed
Boyd AcresMed
SE Bend / LarkspurHigh
Tumalo edgeHigh
Deschutes River WoodsHigh
Eastern Bend / YardleyMed

ALSO COVERED: REDMOND · SISTERS · LA PINE · TUMALO · TERREBONNE · SUNRIVER


§ 04 / Directory

The three local operators Bend-area residents call most.

Ranked by community signal — Google Maps review volume and rating across the Bend / Deschutes County area as of May 2026. We do not accept payment for placement. Verify each operator's current license, insurance, and pricing before authorizing work.

01
4.8★ · 900+ reviews (Bend branch)

Pointe Pest Control — Bend

Central Oregon branch of the statewide PNW leader · Founded 2006

The Bend branch of the highest-volume pest-control operator in the Pacific Northwest, with thousands of reviews network-wide and a 4.9-star statewide average. The Central Oregon crew is trained on the species mix that defines this side of the Cascades — deer mice and pack rats — and on the envelope-sealing strategy that lava-rock substrate requires. Free inspection statewide.

  • Whole-envelope sealing approach for lava-rock substrate properties
  • Quarterly inspection contracts with per-visit reporting
  • Attic and crawl-space cleanouts, insulation services
  • Hantavirus-aware deer-mouse cleanup protocols
Service model
Quarterly contracts · Free inspection
Coverage
Bend · Redmond · Sisters · Tumalo · Sunriver
Specialties
Deer mice · Pack rats · Envelope sealing
02
4.8★ · 600+ reviews

Cascade Pest Solutions — Bend

Locally owned · High-desert specialist · Wildlife-trained

A locally owned operator focused on the wildlife-rodent overlap that defines Bend's outlying neighborhoods — pack rats in juniper-sage edges, deer mice cycling indoors with the first cold snap, the occasional ground squirrel under a deck. Their crew is wildlife-trained, which matters more here than in any other Oregon city we cover.

  • Pack-rat midden dismantling and decontamination
  • Multi-species exclusion (rodents + occasional wildlife overlap)
  • Outbuilding and shop treatment for rural and acreage properties
  • Hantavirus-grade cleanup with N95 + bleach-protocol training
Service model
Per-job + optional quarterly maintenance
Coverage
Bend · Tumalo · Tetherow · La Pine · Sunriver
Specialties
Pack rats · Wildlife · Rural acreage
03
4.7★ · 400+ reviews

High Desert Pest Control

Bend-area independent · New-build + HOA focus

A methodical operator for the tighter newer builds — NorthWest Crossing, Tetherow, Sun Lakes — where rodent ingress is almost always at one of three predictable points: the garage-door threshold, the gas service entry, the dryer vent. Fast, surgical, low overhead. Frequently contracted by HOAs for property-wide service.

  • Garage-door brush-seal and threshold installation
  • Service-penetration sealing for newer construction
  • Annual HOA contracts for property-wide coverage
  • Same-week scheduling for tight-build issues
Service model
Per-job · HOA annual contracts
Coverage
Bend · Redmond · Sisters · NorthWest Crossing
Specialties
New builds · HOA · Garages + thresholds

§ 05 / Local FAQ

Questions Bend residents ask us most.

Answered plainly.

I found mouse droppings in the cabin we just opened for the season. How worried should I be about hantavirus?
Don't sweep, don't vacuum dry. Open windows for 30 minutes before entering. Wet the droppings with a 10% bleach solution and let them sit for 10 minutes. Wipe with disposable cloths, double-bag, and dispose. Wear an N95 or better. The actual case rate in Deschutes County is low, but the protocol is worth following exactly.
What are those big nests of twigs we found in the woodpile?
Almost certainly pack-rat middens. A pack rat will pull in twigs, juniper bark, scat, dropped objects (rings, foil, glass) and build a structured nest. Wear gloves and a respirator, dismantle from the outside in, and bag the material — do not compost. Treat the underlying area.
Will sealing my crawl space actually do anything if the rats are coming up through the lava rock?
Yes. The point is not to seal the rock — that's a losing battle — it's to seal the building envelope above the rock. Crawl-space encapsulation, sealed access door, rodent-grade vent screens, foamed service penetrations. Once the envelope is tight, the rock substrate is no longer connected to the living space.
We just moved here from the wet side. Why don't the standard bait stations seem to work?
Two reasons. First, deer mice and pack rats don't respond to commodity baits the way Norway and house mice do — they're more cautious, more diverse in diet, and harder to draw. Second, the lava-rock substrate means baited-perimeter approaches don't establish a hard boundary. Exclusion first, then targeted mechanical trapping inside the envelope.
When does the season end?
It doesn't, really. Bend's winter is long enough that mouse pressure remains high through March, often into early April. Plan for a March envelope inspection in addition to a fall one.
Bend dispatch

Active infestation in Bend? One call.

We'll route you to the Bend-area operator nearest you. Get rid of your rodents fast!

(541) 422-4462