📋 Step-by-Step
1
Identify your tick transition zones
Deer ticks concentrate in the 'ecotone' — the transition between lawn and woodland/shrub areas. The 3-foot zone where maintained lawn meets leaf litter, wood edges, stone walls, and ornamental plantings contains the majority of ticks. This is your primary treatment target.
2
Create a dry barrier at the wood edge
Ticks require humidity and die in dry sunny conditions. Creating a 3-foot wide barrier of wood chips or gravel between the lawn and any wooded or shrubby areas significantly reduces tick movement into the lawn.
3
Apply bifenthrin spray to transition zones
Apply bifenthrin to the entire transition zone — the 3-10 feet of vegetation at the woodland edge, under shrubs, along stone walls, and in leaf litter areas. This is where to focus — not the open lawn. One treatment in May and one in September covers the two peak tick activity periods.
4
Use tick tubes for sustained control
Tick tubes (Thermacell, others) contain permethrin-treated cotton. Mice collect the cotton for nesting and the permethrin kills deer tick larvae and nymphs on the mice — interrupting the tick life cycle at the mouse reservoir stage. Place every 30 feet along the woodland edge in May and September.
5
Maintain lawn edges
Keep grass mowed to 3 inches or less at the woodland edge. Remove leaf litter accumulation in autumn — this eliminates prime tick overwintering habitat at the tick's preferred border zone.
💡 Pro Tips
💡 The 'tick drag' test: drag a white cloth through vegetation for a minute — any ticks present will attach to the white cloth, showing you where populations are highest
💡 Permethrin applied to clothing and allowed to dry provides excellent personal protection for outdoor work in tick-infested areas
💡 Deer tick nymphs (the primary disease-transmitting stage) are the size of a poppy seed — daily thorough tick checks are essential in endemic areas regardless of yard treatment