I'm writing this in October. We installed all six PestLab units in early April.
We haven't seen significant new mole tunnel activity since May. The grass has recovered well.
But here's what really matters:
Emma got her swing set in June. Mark built it over a weekend. Pink frame, yellow slide exactly like the one she'd drawn.
She's on it every single afternoon after school. Sometimes alone with her music. Sometimes with neighborhood friends.
Tyler learned to play soccer in our backyard. He's not good yet he's four but he practices every evening. With Mark. With the neighbor kids. In a yard where he's safe.
Last month, we hosted Emma's eighth birthday party. In our backyard. Twelve kids. Bouncy house. Games on the grass.
At one point during the party, Emma ran up to me, grass-stained and sweaty and beaming.
"Mom, this is the best birthday ever."
She doesn't know. She doesn't know that I almost failed her. That for ten weeks, I couldn't provide what I'd promised.
She doesn't know about the late-night crying. The guilt. The panic that I'd ruined her childhood.
All she knows is that she has a backyard. A swing set. A place that's hers.
That's how it should be. Kids shouldn't have to know how close their parents came to failing them.
A few weeks after the party, I found something in Emma's room.
The drawing. The one she'd made in April of our backyard.
She'd updated it. Added the real swing set. Added the birthday party. Added Tyler playing soccer.
At the bottom, in her careful second-grade handwriting:
"Thank you for fixing our yard, Mom."
I keep it in my wallet now. As a reminder of what matters.
Total cost to make that drawing real: $300 one-time investment.
Compare that to:
- $1,068/year in pest control we couldn't afford
- Emma's childhood happening in other people's yards
- Tyler remembering "the house where I got hurt"
- Years of broken promises and guilt
- My daughter understanding at age seven that we couldn't afford to give her what other kids had
This wasn't just solving a mole problem. This was fulfilling my most important job: protecting and providing for my kids.
Our neighbors have asked what we did. Bill ordered his own set last week.
When they ask now, I tell them the truth:
"I couldn't afford to let my kids' childhood slip away."