Spring Pest Defense • $124.99 Exterior Treatment
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One-Time Spring Pest Defense

Get your home ready for spring with a one-time exterior pest treatment that helps stop ants, spiders, roaches, and more before they get inside. Pricing varies by home size. Exterior only. No guarantee. Book your free inspection online!

$124.99
- Stop Spring Pests Early
Expires Feb 28, 2026

Get your home ready for spring with our one-time exterior pest treatment for ants, spiders, roaches, and more. Save 20% with this limited-time offer, available through February 28. *Pricing varies by home size. No guarantee. Book your free inspection online!

$100 OFF
Termite Control
Expires Feb 28th, 2026
$50 OFF
Fire Ant Control
Expires Feb 28th, 2026
$25 OFF
Rodent Control
Expires Feb 28th, 2026

Lightning bugs
October 9, 2015

Lightning bugs If you have ever spent a fall evening outside in the Midwest, you surely know what a firefly is. According to a recent report, the one insect every child loves to catch and play with is on the decline in numbers. Most kids will remember running around the yard and collecting the fireflies, also known as lightning bugs, in a mason jar and watching them light up the night. The light omitted from their bodies is actually an attractant for the opposite sex. They light up in different patters as a way of calling out to each other. What most people don't know is that a lightning bug is actually in the same species of insects as a beetle. They are one of the good bugs on the list of helpful insects to keep around. You used to be able to find large swarms of the flying, glowing beetles, however now they it is a very rare occasion to see a full swarm. Some researchers blame habitat loss and light pollution on the decline of fireflies. Fireflies hide during the winter and need natural undisturbed areas to survive. It is thought that human light pollution interrupts their matting patterns by interrupting the mating flashes of the glow. For more information on lightning bugs, please click here

Lightning bugs If you have ever spent a fall evening outside in the Midwest, you surely know what a firefly is. According to a recent report, the one insect every child loves to catch and play with is on the decline in numbers. Most kids will remember running around the yard and collecting the fireflies, also known as lightning bugs, in a mason jar and watching them light up the night. The light omitted from their bodies is actually an attractant for the opposite sex. They light up in different patters as a way of calling out to each other. What most people don't know is that a lightning bug is actually in the same species of insects as a beetle. They are one of the good bugs on the list of helpful insects to keep around. You used to be able to find large swarms of the flying, glowing beetles, however now they it is a very rare occasion to see a full swarm. Some researchers blame habitat loss and light pollution on the decline of fireflies. Fireflies hide during the winter and need natural undisturbed areas to survive. It is thought that human light pollution interrupts their matting patterns by interrupting the mating flashes of the glow. For more information on lightning bugs, please click here
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$124.99 - Stop Spring Pests Early
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Get your home ready for spring with our one-time exterior pest treatment for ants, spiders, roaches, and more. Save 20% with this limited-time offer, available through February 28. *Pricing varies by home size. No guarantee. Book your free inspection online!