Most people have tried the bag from the hardware store. You apply it to the mound. The mound dies. Three weeks later there's another mound twelve inches away — sometimes two. That's not product failure. That's method failure.
Until you understand why mound-only treatment keeps producing this result, you'll keep buying bags and getting the same outcome.
Hog Pest Control delivers fire ant control in Strongsville, OH using the two-step approach: broadcast bait across the full property to reach the colony system, followed by direct mound treatment for immediate knockdown of high-hazard locations. That's the method the research supports. That's the method that holds.
Applied across the entire lawn — not just near the mounds. Workers forage for bait granules, carry them into the tunnel network, and share them with colony members through normal social food exchange. The active ingredient is distributed through the colony, eventually reaching queens and rendering them reproductively non-viable. Colony population declines and collapses over two to six weeks.
Drench or dust applied to active mounds in high-traffic areas immediately. Play spaces, walkways, patio perimeters, garden beds. These get knockdown treatment for immediate hazard reduction while the bait works on the broader colony system. The combination produces fast visible improvement and lasting population reduction. Neither step alone produces both outcomes.
From standard residential yards to high-density infestations near drainage corridors — Hog Pest Control has a specific plan for your property.
The standard that delivers results that actually last in Strongsville, OH properties. Full broadcast bait application plus direct mound treatment for immediate knockdown at hazard zones.
Some Strongsville properties face pressure that exceeds a standard treatment cycle — adjacent to undeveloped land, creek drainage, vacant lots, or moist soil zones. We assess specifically and build a plan that accounts for ongoing re-infestation pressure.
Under sustained adjacent pressure or in yards with soil conditions that favor fire ant colonization, seasonal retreatment — spring before colonies peak and again in fall — maintains control where single treatments fade. Scheduled bait applications timed to local activity windows, not a generic national calendar.
Fire ants are the dominant ant concern in Strongsville, OH, but we handle the full spectrum. Carpenter ants excavating wood in structures. Pavement ants in driveways and entry areas. Odorous house ants in kitchen spaces. We identify before we treat — because applying the wrong method to the wrong species produces zero result.
No exceptions. No abbreviated visits. No mound-only service passed off as complete treatment.
The mound you see is not the colony. That sentence explains most of the fire ant treatment failures in Strongsville, OH.
The mound is the above-ground thermal management structure of a colony whose actual population — workers, brood, and queens — extends through an underground tunnel network that can reach several feet deep and spread several feet in diameter. The workers you see on the mound surface are a fraction of the total population. The queens producing the colony are almost always deeper in the network, away from the mound structure where temperature is most stable.
When you apply a contact insecticide directly to the mound — whether drench, dust, or granular — you're reaching workers in and near the mound structure. In a monogyne colony (single queen), you might get a direct queen kill if the application penetrates deep enough. In a polygyne colony — which is the dominant form in much of the southern United States, including the areas surrounding Strongsville — queens are multiple and distributed through the colony network. The probability of eliminating all queens through mound-only contact treatment is low.
What actually collapses a polygyne fire ant colony is reaching the queens through the food exchange network. Slow-acting bait works because workers collect it as food and carry it into the colony, sharing it with other workers and with queens through trophallaxis — the regurgitation-based food exchange common in social insects. The bait reaches colony members who never surface and never come near the treated mound. Including the queens.
The timeline is why most homeowners give up on bait before it works. Fast-acting contact products produce visible knockdown within hours — satisfying but incomplete. Bait produces a colony-level decline over two to six weeks — effective but requiring patience. The visible result of bait treatment is fewer active mounds with declining worker populations, not immediate mound death.
Hog Pest Control applies the two-step method — bait for colony-level impact, direct mound treatment for immediate hazard zones — as the standard for every fire ant engagement in Strongsville, OH. The direct mound treatment gives you the fast visible improvement. The bait does the work that makes it last. You need both.
Contact insecticides can't reach the depth where queens reside in most active colonies.
One queen killed still leaves the rest to sustain the colony indefinitely.
Workers share food colony-wide through regurgitation — including with queens who never surface.
Two to six weeks of patience produces colony collapse — not just surface-level mound death.
Because they do different jobs. Bait reaches the colony level — including queens — through worker food sharing. It's slow-acting by design. Direct mound treatment produces immediate worker knockdown for hazard areas. Bait alone doesn't produce fast enough visible improvement. Mound treatment alone doesn't reach the queens or adjacent colony network. Together, they cover both timeframes.
Broadcast bait produces visible mound reduction in two to six weeks as the colony population declines. You'll see fewer active mounds with reduced worker activity before mounds disappear entirely. New mound appearance near treated areas is normal in the early weeks as the colony adjusts — it doesn't indicate treatment failure.
Depends on the pressure. Properties with no significant adjacent fire ant source often hold for one season after a single two-step treatment. Properties bordering undeveloped or unmaintained land typically benefit from twice-yearly treatment — spring and fall. Hog Pest Control advises after the property assessment.
Broadcast bait is applied at low rates and formulated for ant collection — not surface contact. Re-entry is appropriate once the product has settled, typically 15–30 minutes after application. We advise on specific re-entry timing based on the product used.
Call us. Our re-treatment guarantee covers return visits within the warranty window. New mound activity after treatment is assessed — we determine whether it's residual colony reorganization (normal) or new infestation from an adjacent source (requires supplemental treatment). We handle both under the guarantee.
"Had fire ants in my backyard for years. Tried every granular product sold at every hardware store in town. They moved around, came back, drove me crazy. Hog Pest Control came out, broadcast baited the whole yard, treated the mounds near the playset directly, and within three weeks the situation was genuinely different. Six months later it's still holding. The broadcast bait approach was something nobody had ever explained to me before. It's the only thing that worked."
"Solid service. The technician walked the whole yard before doing anything — found mounds I hadn't even noticed near the back fence. Treated everything and explained the two-step process. The only reason for four stars is I expected faster results and had to remind myself this takes a few weeks to fully show. But it did work. I'd use them again."
Hog Pest Control serves Strongsville, OH with fire ant control that reaches the colony, not just the mound. Same-week scheduling available.
Click Here to Call (877) 905-2885Book now. Limited fire ant treatment slots this week in Strongsville.