![]() |
Packing a blanket......suggestions?
Ok...since I am getting very creeped out by the bug issue....here is what I am thinking...
Pack a light clean white sheet to put entirely over the bed. I will be in the uk and italy in May, so it shouldn't be too cold. Take my super light but super warm fuzzy blanket to use as a top blanket. I mean, what exactly are bedbugs? Do they just stay under the covers...or do they crawl all over the place!! Yikes! I am getting the willies!!! |
At least a white sheet will show up the little bugs in the morning! Seriously I have never had a problem with bed bugs anywhere but I am a bit paranoid about pillows - I can usually smell the last occupier. I take a quilted pillow with me everywhere as it only smells of me!
|
Bedbugs usually hide behind things like furniture and wall art during the day, and come out to feed at night. So, bringing your own sheet probably won't be a deterrant, since the bedbugs crawl into bed from the walls anyway.
|
You could get a silk travel-sheet too, or even a travel-weight sleeping bag.
|
Those measures won't prevent bedbugs from getting to you if they're present; they're attracted by the carbon dioxide you exhale (if you don't, you die, so no point trying to stop it). Bedbugs crawl pretty much everywhere to get to the food source (your blood). That said, in all liklihood, you won't have to deal with bedbugs, and if you do, just think of them like mosquitos, a nuisance, nothing more (apparantly, they are NOT a disease vector, so you don't have to worry about that, so they're even better than mosquitos).
|
Don't know if tea tree oil prevents being bitten by bed bugs but it would work as an after bite.
|
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...3_bedbugs.html
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/bedbugs/DS00663 Sounds like the bedbugs mainly hang out in slummy places, so you shouldn't worry too much. But you can at least see a picture so you know what to inspect your hotel room for. |
I have never had an issue with bed bugs - don't get too paranoid. Another suggestion would be to take large sarong which can also be used to wrap yourself in if the weather is warm enough in Italy (hmm maybe not depends where you are going)to lie on for a picnic and also be used as a sheet if you feel the need. This way you get more use out of one item. Ok so it will not be pristine by the time you have picnicked on it!! I really wouldn't worry - where are you planning on staying? Don't get the willies - just relax and enjoy.
|
If you insist on your own item of bedding, take one that is chemically treated to resist bedbugs:
http://www.gogogear.com.au/shopexd.a...amp;quantity=1 |
This question is bugging me. Do you mean fleas?
|
No, bedbugs are different. You can Google for pictures.
This article provides a protocol for dealing with rooms that have bedbugs (scroll near the bottom): http://docforgey.com/faq/1.html Bedbugs are still not very common in developed countries, even if they are more common than they used to be. |
I think we call them dust mites in the U.K.
|
With all due respect...you've posted on here about bedbugs (twice), deodorant, public bathrooms, shared hotel bathrooms, feminine hygiene, and sleeping pills for the plane. I really think you should calm down and stop "getting the willies" about all of these potential, and not major, physical problems. If it's that worrying, are you sure you want to travel?
|
She's just doing her research in advance. I think it's cool that she asks all the questions everyone else is embarrassed to ask. Better to figure it all out from the safety of her own home and then venture out with poise, than to go without preparation and have all the unexpected issues freak her out in a foreign place.
|
Dust mites and bedbugs are definitely not the same thing; dust mites are only an annoyance when you inhale them, and are pretty much microscopic, while bedbugs are definitely visible, and more the category of mosquitos, leaving potentially annoying (though by no means fatal) bites.
|
Auldyins, bed bugs are not the same as dust mites. According to my allergist, dust mites are everywhere. Bed bugs are certainly not. And in the US we call dust mites dust mites.
|
Are bed bugs not fleas?
|
Not fleas either. Something else entirely.
|
auldyins: look at these websites and you'll see a picture of a bedbug.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...3_bedbugs.html http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/bedbugs/DS00663 |
I think I will be scratching in my own bed at the thought tonight.
|
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:03 PM. |