Meehan's Lawn Service, Inc.

Meehan's Lawn Service, Inc. Meehan's Lawn Service Inc. was founded with only ONE objective: to be the best lawn care service around!

By using superior products and putting the best trained technicians on our customer's lawns we WILL provide the best service. is in business to provide, You our customer, the best possible service and care. Our goal is to help you achieve the best landscape possible. We know that our combination of personal attention, a complete program and quality products will give you the thicker, greener, LAWN that you and your family will be proud of.

Well, my first observation of Box tree moth in northeast Ohio. Found in North Olmsted this morning. Plants were treated ...
05/05/2026

Well, my first observation of Box tree moth in northeast Ohio. Found in North Olmsted this morning. Plants were treated for the caterpillars and reported to the Ohio Department of Agriculture. They're Here!!! just another pest to add to the list of boxwood damaging issues. These were found on a property in north Olmsted. Please keep your eye out for box tree moth and if you see them, please call our horticulturist to arrange treatment!

We occasionally get calls from clients worried that their trees have borers. In most cases this is the cause of the hole...
04/13/2026

We occasionally get calls from clients worried that their trees have borers. In most cases this is the cause of the holes.

Those perfectly spaced rows of tiny holes drilled into your tree bark. Dozens of them. Neat lines, like someone took a hole punch to the trunk.

That was me.

Hello. I'm the sapsucker. I'm a woodpecker, but I don't hammer for insects the way my cousins do. I drill shallow wells into bark and wait for sap to fill them. Then I come back and drink.

Those wells stay open. Sap keeps flowing. And that's where it gets interesting — I'm not the only one who shows up.

Hummingbirds drink from my wells. Warblers stop at them during migration. Butterflies, bees, ants, and dozens of other insects feed from the sap I tapped. In early spring, before most flowers bloom, my drill work is one of the only sugar sources in the forest.

I don't damage healthy trees. The wells are shallow. The tree seals them within days. If you see rows of holes and the tree is thriving — that's my work, and it's feeding your entire yard.

 If you see neat rows of small holes in tree bark:

• That's a sapsucker well system, not insect damage
• Leave it — it's a feeding station for dozens of species
• Sapsuckers return to the same trees year after year

I drilled a cafeteria into your tree. The whole neighborhood is eating there. 

The freezing temperatures last week really did a number on the magnolia flowers this spring. Sadly, even those buds stil...
04/11/2026

The freezing temperatures last week really did a number on the magnolia flowers this spring. Sadly, even those buds still in their fuzzy buds were likely damaged enough that they will not open. Maybe next year!

Our horticulturist often gets questions about lichens. Leave it be, trying to remove it does more harm than good! https:...
03/29/2026

Our horticulturist often gets questions about lichens. Leave it be, trying to remove it does more harm than good! https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1HcM6D17xu/

I am not killing your tree. I am not a fungus, a moss, or a disease.

That gray-green crust on the bark of your oak. The leafy stuff on the branch. The dusty pale coating on the fence post. You've been searching for tree disease treatments for three years.

I'm a lichen. And your tree isn't sick. It's certified.

A lichen isn't a single organism. It's two organisms fused into one — a fungus and an alga living together as one body. The fungus provides structure, protection, and mineral absorption. The alga provides food through photosynthesis. Neither can live like this alone. Together they form something that resembles neither.

I grow on your tree. Not in it. My body attaches to the bark surface. I don't pe*****te the bark. I don't steal nutrients. I don't block light from the leaves. I don't cause decay. I'm using your tree as a surface the same way a bumper sticker uses your car.

Here's why I'm actually a good sign.

Lichen cannot grow in polluted air. Air pollution kills me. If your tree is covered in lichen, the air around your property is clean enough to support me. Ecologists use lichen presence to map air quality — more lichen species in an area means cleaner air. Your lichen-covered oak is a certificate of air quality you didn't know you had.

The tree you think is declining because of me is usually declining because of something else — drought stress, root compaction, pest damage — and I happened to be on the bark when you noticed. I was here before the decline started. I didn't cause it.

I grow a millimeter or two per year. The patch on your oak branch that's the size of your palm has been growing for decades. I was here before the deck was built. Before the house was painted. Before you moved in.

🌿 What to do about lichen on your trees:

- Nothing. Leave it. Lichen on bark is not a problem and removing it accomplishes nothing except damaging the bark surface underneath

- If a tree covered in lichen is declining, the cause is underground or internal — root damage, compaction, drought, boring insects. The lichen is a bystander, not the culprit. Investigate the roots and soil before blaming the surface

- Lichen on a fence post, stone wall, or garden structure is the same organism doing the same harmless thing. It adds texture and character and indicates clean air

- If lichen suddenly disappears from trees in your area where it used to thrive, that's a signal worth paying attention to — it may indicate a change in local air quality

- Lichen on fallen branches is a building material for hummingbirds and gnatcatchers. Both species press lichen flakes onto the outside of their nests with spider silk for camouflage. The lichen on your oak may end up on a nest in your yard

Don't scrape it off. Don't spray it. It's not the problem. It's the proof that the air is clean enough for it to exist 🌿

Address

6344 Eastland Road
Brook Park, OH
44142

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 5pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 5pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 5pm
Thursday 8:30am - 5pm
Friday 8:30am - 5pm

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