@Zack-and-Jennifer0, I like your new profile photo, it's very graphic, easy to make out even in the small thumbnail. I hope it helps.
I had a look on your listing on the computer. The rules are clear, but too long for me to read, even interested in them. I doubt that guests read them all. You could group them into important = avoiding danger and degradation and a bit less important - avoiding annoyance.
I'd leave only the important ones in the listing and send the others before you accept the booking. The hours for the trash etc are not really decicive before you book. You could write a rule in the sense: You accept to follow instructions concerning normal use of appliances and city rules on noise, trash removal etc. You will get them with the booking or immediately, on request.
In your text, you have some descriptions twice: the rules and the part about the area.
Your pictures seem very dark. If you take them against the light, bright day outside, darker room inside, tap your finger on the phone screen at a darker area. That indicated the sensor, where from to take the brightness measurement. Cameras and most phones allow you also to fix the measures first and take a photo after that. Most times by having only the darker room in sight, half clicking on a camera (on the phone you have to look it up, might be a double tap), then turning the camera to see all of it and finish clicking.
Your entrance looks a bit forbidding and it might be visible from the road and break your wish for anonymity. I like your second photo better, if it was much brighter.
Many of your pictures are cold, not personal. It's clear that it is a place for rent only, not a lived in home, and many people look for that. But you could try to add a few touches, that interrupt the coldness. A funny teddy bear sitting somewhere, as you host kids, a bright colored pillow besides the pretty earth colored ones, more of the carpets visible on the photos, maybe a set of glasses and a jug of lemonade on a table or kitchen counter. Something that tells a story: "You will arrive after your trip and your host prepared something thoughtfully for you." - Your hosts, real persons, care about you and the place. It's a place to feel well.
That's no guarantee to scare away the kind of guests you had lately, but it makes the place more attractive for nice guests and considerate people plan a holiday involving a house some time in advance. The idea is to get the nice ones first.
The airbnb profi hosts often recommend to use parts of the guests reviews in the photos and photo captions. I had a look on your reviews and they are all good, but that advice would not work. Many say "accomodating" and "helpful". I get that too and when I get it too often, I change something. It means "host can be talked into unreasonable concessions".
Your first guests mentioned personal touches, snacks, welcome letters etc. That's in the sense of my advice above, you could add a photo of the welcome setting. Comfort was mentioned and fast internet - you could stage a photo to represent that, maybe an ipad and a laptop on the couches, a plaid (if it's not a summer location).