Stop ticks in their tracks — stay safe from tick-borne disease
Ticks are small, blood-sucking external parasites that attach firmly to the skin of mammals, birds and reptiles. In India, common species include the cattle tick (Rhipicephalus microplus), brown dog tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus) and the Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD) tick (Haemaphysalis spinigera). Ticks transmit serious diseases such as Lyme disease, KFD, Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever, ehrlichiosis and babesiosis.
Ticks are not just a concern in forests — they thrive in urban gardens, parks, kennels, cattle sheds and even inside homes with pets. Our tick control program targets both the host (pets, livestock) and the environment with acaricides, residual spray and IGR treatment of garden beds and outdoor areas.
Health risks of tick bites
- Skin rashes, itching and secondary bacterial infections
- Tick paralysis (in children and pets, in severe cases)
- Lyme disease — long-term joint and neurological complications
- Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD) — haemorrhagic fever in forest-edge areas
- Babesiosis and ehrlichiosis in pets and livestock
Our treatment process
- Inspection: Identify tick species, hotspots in garden, kennel and home.
- Pet & livestock coordination: Vet-approved tick collars, spot-ons or dips.
- Outdoor treatment: Acaricide spray on lawns, garden beds and kennels.
- Indoor treatment: Crack & crevice treatment of skirting, carpets and bedding.
- Personal protection: DEET-based repellents and full-sleeve clothing guidance.
- Follow-up: Bi-weekly visits for severe infestations in farm or kennel settings.
Where we treat
- Residential gardens, lawns and farmhouses
- Kennels, catteries, cattle sheds and stables
- Schools, parks, resorts and outdoor event venues
- Construction sites and farmlands
A single female tick can lay 3,000–5,000 eggs. Treating the pet is not enough — the environment must be treated too.
