Jacobs Turf — soil-first lawn care in Atlanta
Backyard treated with natural In2Care mosquito control in Atlanta

Services · Recurring · Mar–Oct

Natural Mosquito Control in Atlanta

Season-long control built on In2Care stations and a botanical knock-down spray — a fraction of the pesticide, safe for the bees and butterflies you actually want.

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The problem

Fogging hits everything and misses what matters

Most mosquito companies fog your whole yard on a schedule — a broad-spectrum pesticide misted over everything green, killing whatever it lands on and drifting onto the pollinators you want to keep. Worse, it never reaches the hidden pockets of water where mosquitoes actually breed. We do the opposite: a low-pesticide program that works the mosquito’s own lifecycle.


How it works · In2Care

Turning the mosquito against her own kind

She thinks she found the perfect place to lay eggs. She’s actually just been recruited to carry the treatment everywhere you can’t.

1
Lure. A dark, water-filled station with a yeast attractant reads as the ideal breeding spot — up to 4× more attractive than a natural puddle.
2
Contaminate. Slipping in, she picks up two things off the gauze: a larvicide (pyriproxyfen) and a natural fungus (Beauveria bassiana).
3
Disseminate. Already dosed, she flies off and lays eggs in every hidden pocket of water she visits — the cryptic sites a spray truck never reaches — carrying the larvicide with her, where it stops her larvae from ever becoming adults.
4
Collapse. A few days later the fungus takes her too. The breeding cycle breaks from the inside out.
≤ 1 ppbThe larvicide is lethal to mosquito larvae at parts-per-billion — hundreds of times more targeted than conventional larvicides, and the fungus only attacks insects like her, not bees and butterflies.

The botanical blend · EcoVia MT

Plant oils, not a chemical cloud

During peak season — usually right after a heavy rain — we back the stations with a botanical knock-down spray on the shady, humid harborage where adult mosquitoes rest. It’s built on plant essential oils, targeted to where they hide rather than misted over the whole yard.

From $55 / moMarch–October · each station covers ~4,300 sq ft · most yards run 1–3

Professor’s note

It’s a program, not a one-time fog. It runs on the mosquito lifecycle, so it builds control across the season instead of buying you one quiet weekend — and after heavy rain, give it a week or two to pull back to full.

Questions

FAQ

Is In2Care safe for pets and kids?
Yes. The larvicide works at parts-per-billion doses inside the stations, and the botanical knock-down spray is plant oils applied only to shady harborage — not blanket-fogged across the yard where kids and pets play.
Does it kill bees and butterflies?
No. The fungus (Beauveria bassiana) only attacks insects like the mosquito, and because we skip blanket fogging there is no drifting chemical cloud settling on flowers where pollinators feed.
How is this different from fogging or spraying?
A fogger mists a broad-spectrum pesticide over everything on a schedule and only kills what it lands on. In2Care turns the mosquito into the delivery system: she carries the larvicide into hidden breeding water a truck can never reach.
How many stations does my yard need?
Each station covers roughly 4,300 sq ft. Most yards run one to three. You can size yours in the estimator, and pricing starts at $55/month for the first station, March through October.
How long until I notice fewer mosquitoes?
It builds across the season as the lifecycle breaks. After a big rain and hatch, give it a week or two to pull full control back — the honest trade for using a tiny fraction of the pesticide a fogging company blankets your yard with.

Fewer mosquitoes, less spray

Size your yard for stations and see your monthly number, or reach out and we’ll get your season started.

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