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Is Your Patio a Sanctuary or a Mosquito Feeding Ground?

The "Invisible" Barrier to Your Summer

You didn’t invest in a patio, pool, or firepit just to look at them through a window. Yet, for many homeowners in the "wetland corridor" of Suffolk County, that is exactly what happens. When the sun goes down, the mosquitoes come out, and suddenly your outdoor sanctuary becomes a feeding ground.

Most people try to fight back with candles, zappers, or store-bought mists, only to find themselves forced back indoors within twenty minutes. If you’re still "sharing" your BBQ with a swarm of pests, you don’t have an outdoor living space—you have a liability.


Why "Just Spraying" Fails

At Lawn Pro, we don't believe in just "spraying the yard." That’s a temporary fix for a permanent problem. To truly reclaim your property, we use a targeted strategy that uncovers where the "pain" is actually hiding:

  • The Underside Strategy (Foliage Treatment): Mosquitoes are smart; they don't sit in the sun. They hide on the underside of leaves and in shaded, damp areas during the heat of the day. We treat these specific resting areas to create a "kill zone" that catches them while they sleep.
  • Source Mitigation (Breeding Grounds): A single capful of stagnant water can produce hundreds of mosquitoes. We act as consultants for your property, helping you identify and eliminate the hidden breeding grounds—like clogged gutters or low spots—where larvae thrive.
  • The "Memorial to Labor Day" Shield: A one-time spray is like an "Upfront Contract" with no follow-through. We provide a scheduled rotation that keeps your protective barrier strong all summer long, ensuring your holiday weekends remain sting-free.

The Reality Check

A single mosquito can ruin an entire evening. You can either continue to retreat indoors when the sun goes down, or you can draw a line in the sand.

Where do we go from here?

If you’re tired of being the "main course" at your own BBQ, let’s talk about a program that actually works. If you’re happy staying inside, that’s okay too—but your patio deserves better.