Southwest Florida invasive species specialist. Lifelong wildlife background. Every removal done by hand — the right way.
"When you call Evict‑A‑Beast, you're not calling a franchise or a dispatch center. You're calling someone who genuinely understands these animals and cares about doing the job right."
Logan has been around reptiles and amphibians his entire life — not as a hobbyist, but as someone who grew up observing them, understanding their behavior, and learning the real difference between the species that belong here and the ones causing serious damage.
That background is what Evict‑A‑Beast is built on. Real field experience. Genuine species knowledge. A commitment to doing this work humanely and correctly.
Logan's understanding of reptiles and amphibians didn't come from a certification course or a training manual. It came from years spent outdoors — in fields, along waterways, and in the kinds of habitats where these animals actually live.
That early exposure built something formal training rarely provides: the ability to read an environment, predict animal behavior, and identify species quickly and accurately under real field conditions.
By the time Southwest Florida's invasive species problem became undeniable, Logan already understood the animals at the center of it — and why invasive species removal requires a different kind of knowledge and approach.
“My mission, my passion, is to save wildlife and wild places.”
Growing up watching Steve Irwin do exactly that — with joy, with knowledge, and with total fearlessness — shaped the way Logan thinks about this work.
Southwest Florida — early fieldwork
Cane toads, iguanas, and Cuban tree frogs require species-specific handling knowledge, behavioral awareness, and an understanding of Florida wildlife law. Evict‑A‑Beast was built specifically around this kind of work.
Hand removal — done correctly and consistently — is effective, safe for native wildlife, and responsible for the surrounding ecosystem. It's the approach that aligns with how Logan believes this work should be done.
Cane toads are dangerous to dogs, cats, horses, native snakes, birds, and fish. Their tadpoles are toxic to aquatic life — fish that eat them can die. In Florida they have no natural predators, which is exactly why removal matters.⁾ FWC
Evict‑A‑Beast relocates native reptiles and amphibians — snakes, lizards, frogs — at no charge, rather than harming them. Because the native ecosystem matters as much as the invasive species problem.
Years working with reptiles and amphibians taught Logan something most pest control companies never learn: the removal itself is only part of the job. Understanding why an animal is in a specific location — what habitat it's using, what drives its activity, how it responds when approached — is what separates effective removal from temporary results.
"I'm not just catching what's visible. I'm reading the property — water sources, cover, light, vegetation — the same things the animals are looking at."
Every property gets the same attention. Logan assesses habitat, not just animal count. That's why clients with recurring problems finally get real, lasting results.
All work follows Florida wildlife guidelines. Native species are never harmed. Invasive species are handled humanely and responsibly, every time.
Native black racer — identified, handled, relocated
Southwest Florida — on the water with family
Southwest Florida's natural environment is one of the most biodiverse in the country. The invasive species threatening it — and the pets living alongside it — aren't an abstract problem. They're a daily reality for the families and homeowners Logan works with.
Teaching the difference between a cane toad and a native species. Relocating a harmless snake instead of killing it. Explaining honestly what's in a yard and why. That's what this work looks like up close.
The goal isn't to clear a property and move on. It's to leave the people living there genuinely better off — with a safer yard, a better understanding of the ecosystem around them, and someone they can call when something comes back.
“If children don’t grow up knowing about nature and appreciating it, they won’t understand it. And if they don’t understand it, they won’t protect it. And if they don’t protect it, who will?”
— Sir David AttenboroughUnderstanding which species belong here — and why it matters — starts young.
If you're dealing with invasive species on your property — or you're not sure what you're looking at — one call is all it takes. Evening and night calls welcome.
419‑777‑TOADSouthwest Florida · Invasive Species Specialist · Humane · Hand Removal Only