Ticks are a steady concern across Southeastern Massachusetts, especially on properties near cranberry country, pine woods, and brushy lot lines. Our all-natural tick control in Southeastern MA helps create a protective barrier around lawns, garden spaces, and the outdoor areas families and pets use most. Applied every four weeks by trained technicians, it is designed to help reduce tick activity before a bite becomes a bigger issue.
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Across Southeastern Massachusetts, ticks thrive in leaf litter, shaded borders, wooded backyards, and overgrown transitions near wetlands and field edges. They are more than a nuisance because they can carry Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses that affect both people and pets. Even a quick trip across the yard during the active season can increase exposure.
Most homeowners do not realize how active ticks are until they start showing up on dogs, shoes, or clothing after time outside. Common trouble spots include shaded foundation beds, low shrubs, mulch borders, and the rough edges where lawn meets woods or brush. If ticks are turning up on people or pets, they are likely already present on your property. When you choose ohDEER’s natural tick control in Southeastern MA, you get a safer, smarter approach built for long-term protection.
When you choose ohDEER, you’re choosing:
Light tick pressure around a suburban yard? Our Control plan may be all you need. Wooded edges, heavy brush, or year-round concern? Annual Control provides uninterrupted protection across every season. Here’s how ohDEER keeps ticks off your property all year long.
ohDEER’s Tick Control provides regular applications of our all-natural tick repellent spray, keeping ticks off your lawn, away from your family, pets, and property.
Every four weeks, spring–fall.
Everything in Control, plus targeted granular treatment of tick habitat areas — leaf litter, wood edges, and shaded zones where ticks hide and breed.
Every four weeks, spring–fall
Continuous tick control across all seasons, including fall and winter applications to eliminate overwintering tick populations before they emerge in spring.
Every four weeks, year-round.
Ticks often move into outdoor spaces quietly, settling into shaded borders, planting beds, and wooded edges before anyone notices them. Our program helps reduce tick activity where they hide and breed, creating more usable outdoor spaces for family life, pets, and everyday enjoyment.


Instead of simply treating visible activity, we apply a plant-based solution to brushy lot lines, low shrub masses, and shaded borders near boggy ground and nearby transition areas. The goal is to leave pine-side beds, wetland edges, and dense transitions around the property with a stronger deterrent barrier and none of the drawbacks that come with synthetic pesticides.
We don’t believe in hiding behind hard-to-pronounce chemicals or using them in our products!
Yes. Professional natural tick control treatments can significantly reduce tick populations without harsh chemicals. At ohDEER, our plant-based tick sprays are safe for kids, pets, and pollinators while effectively disrupting the tick life cycle.
Ticks are active until the ground is completely frozen over, when they hibernate. They will become active again when the ground unfreezes.
A combination of natural tick control sprays and smart landscaping helps prevent ticks. Mow your lawn weekly, clear away leaves and brush, move woodpiles into sunny areas, and add a barrier of gravel or wood chips around your yard to reduce tick migration.
For best results, schedule tick yard treatments every 3 to 4 weeks during peak tick season. Consistent applications maintain protection and reduce the chances of a tick infestation taking hold on your property.
Ticks can transmit several tick-borne diseases, including Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, babesiosis, and Powassan virus. Regular tick prevention measures and quick removal of any attached ticks can help protect your family and pets from these illnesses.
If you’re finding ticks in the middle of your yard they were most likely brought there by a passing animal like a dog, cat, deer, rabbit, etc. We do not normally spray grass areas because as long as it is maintained, it will get too hot for the tick or mosquitoes to live and breed there.