“The owner shows up every month — same person every time. Anthon, by name.”
From the older neighborhoods around downtown to the newer subdivisions east of Power Road, Mesa homes deal with their own mix of pest pressure year-round. Anthon Perkins answers the phone, runs the route himself, and uses pet- and kid-friendly chemicals on every property.
Mesa is two stories under one zip-code map. Older homes in West Mesa and around downtown — built between the 1950s and 1980s — were framed before modern pest-resistant construction was standard, which means more entry points for ants, crickets, spiders, and the occasional scorpion working its way in through the garage.
Newer subdivisions east of Power Road sit closer to the desert edge, where scorpions and rodents are part of the landscape and block-wall yards make ideal harborage. Both situations want the same thing: a steady monthly perimeter service that treats the entry points before the pest is inside the house — same technician every visit, flat rate quoted before any spraying starts.
Most Mesa customers start with general pest control on a monthly schedule and add scorpion or rodent service when the season calls for it. Tap any service for the full scope of work.
Monthly perimeter treatment for the pests that show up in nearly every Mesa home — ants on the patio, crickets in the garage, spiders in the eaves. Pet- and kid-friendly chemicals, perimeter-first approach, no all-day-spray theater.
See general pest controlTargeted scorpion treatment for the East Mesa subdivisions backing up to desert and the older neighborhoods with block-wall yards. Perimeter focus, sealing recommendations, and the same monthly follow-up as general service.
See scorpion controlRoof rats, mice, and pack rats — the three rodents Mesa homeowners actually deal with. Exterior bait stations, entry-point sealing, and follow-up checks on every visit, with the same person tracking activity over time.
See rodent controlOne of three named neighbor recommendations for Tarzie on Nextdoor — this one from a homeowner here in Mesa.
“The owner shows up every month — same person every time. Anthon, by name.”
Tarzie runs the route from a base in San Tan Valley. Mesa sits inside a tight southeast-Valley loop that also covers Queen Creek, Gilbert, Chandler, and Apache Junction — so the truck is rarely more than 20 minutes from any service address.
Anthon takes the calls himself during route hours, and a quote is a five-minute conversation — no online form gauntlet required.