Lowell has grown fast, but plenty of its yards still meet the woods, fields, and creek edges that ticks call home, and the new subdivisions spreading across town often back right up to that remaining green space. Add the Razorback Greenway running through the area and Beaver Lake just a few miles east, and there is no shortage of habitat for ticks to thrive and wildlife to carry them in. Fairway Lawns provides professional tick control built to protect the families and pets who use these yards, with targeted treatments for the shaded, brushy parts of your property, recurring options for season-long coverage, free quotes, and a re-service guarantee between visits.
Tick control starts where the lawn meets the brush and the tree line
Our tick service is built around how Lowell families actually use their yards, whether that is a back patio in a new subdivision, a lawn that runs toward a field or creek, or an older lot with mature trees. We start with a property assessment to locate where ticks shelter and how they reach the yard, then treat those high-risk zones and lay down a protective barrier around the perimeter. The focus stays on heading ticks off rather than reacting after the fact, with optional recurring maintenance to keep that coverage going, and every application is made with children and pets in mind.
A clear, repeatable process keeps protection steady
We walk the yard to find the tick-prone zones, the problem edges, and the moisture and wildlife routes funneling ticks toward where your family spends time.
We apply targeted treatments where ticks actually wait for a host, concentrating on the shaded, brushy, high-risk areas rather than soaking the whole lawn.
We set up a treated barrier around the spaces you use, taking in the lawn edges and foundation perimeter, fence lines, shrubs and beds, tall grass, and field, creek, or wooded borders, along with the areas under decks, around sheds, and across pet areas, play areas, patios, and outdoor seating.
Because ticks keep arriving through the active season, we offer recurring treatments that stay a step ahead of new activity and hold the yard's protection over time.
A tick bite often goes unseen until well after the fact
Ticks earn attention because they can affect both people and pets, and they are experts at staying hidden. The bite itself is painless and easy to miss, which is what makes a treated yard worth so much: it lowers the population where it starts rather than leaving your family to deal with ticks one by one after they have found a host.
Lowell’s rapid growth has not erased its tick habitat. New construction often borders fields, creek beds, and patches of woods, the Razorback Greenway threads through the area, and Beaver Lake sits just east of town. Plenty of yards back up to tree lines or wild edges that deer, rodents, and other animals travel, leaving ticks at the boundary of the grass. For families with pets, children, a green-edged lot, or a yard meant for hosting, getting ahead of that exposure makes a real difference.
Ticks settle where the yard stays shaded, damp, and quiet
Ticks avoid the open, sunny lawn and gather in the cool, humid, low-traffic margins instead. Around Lowell that tends to mean tall grass and unmowed stretches, brush and overgrown vegetation, and the leaf piles, woodpiles, and mulch beds that trap moisture. They collect along shaded lawn edges and fence lines, under decks and around sheds, and especially where the yard meets fields, creek corridors, wooded borders, or trail edges that wildlife uses as a route. Pet areas, play areas, and any damp, shaded pocket all qualify, which is why the edges and transitions matter far more than the middle of the lawn.
The goal is getting your own backyard back
Dogs and outdoor cats can carry ticks right to the back door, kids playing in the grass make easy targets, and the bites usually go unseen until later. Professional yard treatments shrink that exposure around the outdoor spaces your household relies on, so you can reclaim the parts of a Lowell yard worth having, from the patio and deck to the play area, fire pit, and lawn, along with pet areas, garden beds, and the spots where everyone gathers to eat outside.
Tick pressure swings with the Northwest Arkansas seasons
Spring: As Benton County warms and the brush greens up, ticks emerge in numbers and outdoor time ramps up. Getting ahead of them early stops populations from digging in around the property.
Summer: Peak exposure. Warm, humid days keep ticks active in shaded and brushy areas right when families are outside the most.
Fall: Ticks stay busy into the cooler months here, so it is worth keeping protection going past summer, especially on lots that border woods or fields.
Rain and Moisture: Storms across the region feed the damp, shaded conditions ticks need, and activity often climbs in the days after a wet spell.
Local knowledge and a real guarantee set the service apart
Our Springdale-based technicians are right next door and understand Lowell, from the new neighborhoods that border green space to the older lots with mature trees, and the tick pressure that comes with both. We are licensed and insured, with applicators certified through the Arkansas State Plant Board. You get a free quote and transparent pricing, fast and flexible scheduling that is often next-day, and treatments made with pets and family in mind. Recurring service keeps the yard covered through the season, a re-service guarantee brings us back if ticks return between visits, and there is no long-term contract. Holding a 4.5 out of 5 rating from over 78,000 Southeast homeowners, we also cover related work such as mosquito, flea, and lawn care.
A few yard habits stretch the protection between treatments
A few consistent routines around the yard go a long way between treatments. Keep the grass cut and the trees and shrubs trimmed, and clear leaf piles, woodpiles, and yard debris so ticks lose the damp cover they rely on. Beat back overgrown brush, especially where the yard meets a field, creek, or the woods, and lay a mulch, rock, or gravel strip along that border to make it harder for ticks to cross. Keep pet areas tidy and check pets after they have been outdoors, discourage deer and rodents from settling in, and shift bird feeders away from the lawn if they are drawing wildlife. Set play areas well away from the tree line, and talk to us about recurring service for dependable coverage all season.
A single treatment has its place, but ticks rarely arrive just once
A one-time treatment fits a specific event, a sudden surge, or knocking down current activity in a hurry. It brings ticks down in the treated areas, though it cannot hold off the new arrivals that keep coming as the season rolls on, which is a real factor on a Lowell lot that borders woods, fields, or a creek.
For genuine peace of mind, staying ahead beats catching up
For lasting coverage, ongoing service wins out, since ticks keep coming back the entire active season across Benton County. Routine treatments stay in front of new activity and lower the chance of reinfestation, leaving the yard usable spring through fall.
Dependable tick control across Lowell and the surrounding area
Our Springdale-based team provides tick control throughout Lowell and the surrounding Benton County communities, including Rogers, Cave Springs, and the neighborhoods stretching along the I-49 corridor. From new subdivisions that border green space to older homes with mature trees, your property falls within our service range.
A few straight answers make tick control easier to plan
Do not let ticks keep your family off the lawn or away from the trails and green space nearby. Reach out to Fairway Lawns with your property details, and our Springdale team will schedule a free assessment, map out where ticks are thriving, and set up a protective treatment plan tailored to your Lowell yard. Ongoing visits plus our re-service guarantee hold that protection steady.