Search

Bedbugs, Anyone?

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 01:51 PM
  #21  
Conversation Starter
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 27,868
Likes: 0
Since seeing the shows on TV about them, I have a new rule -- suitcases NEVER go on the beds or floors. I put them on the luggage racks/stands and unpack stuff to hang in closet or put in dressers. And when I get home, suitcases get unpacked in garage --dirty clothes go directly to laundry room and clean clothes get carried to dresser/closet.

I figure that one less thing I need to bring home as a souvenir!

Debi
DebitNM is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 02:34 PM
  #22  
 
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 4,203
Likes: 0
Excellent suggestion Debit.
It's funny that I almost always just put my bag on the floor and only use the closet to hang clothes. I can count the times I have used the stand... even though I can't think of one reason why I would not use it.
From this day forward I plan to do it just as you
TxTravelPro is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 02:54 PM
  #23  
Conversation Starter
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 27,868
Likes: 0
TTP -- I have noticed of late luggage stands are often not in a room or there is only one in room. I will actually put my suitcase on desk or dresser or what ever to keep it off floor and bed. DH thought I was crazy the first time I chided him "NO bags on the bed" but he has finally gotten the hang of it.
Debi
DebitNM is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 03:36 PM
  #24  
 
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 8,137
Likes: 0
So. how do we kill them? Anyone?
Judyrem is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 03:51 PM
  #25  
 
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 13,810
Likes: 0
My husband worked in a cockroach infested town once, and when he came home, he left the luggage outdoors overnight in freezing temps to make sure they were gone..

thankfully, he never had another job project there, but at least the weather took care of any paranoia.
jetset1 is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 04:54 PM
  #26  
Conversation Starter
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 27,868
Likes: 0
Apparently, dresser drawers are subject to the buggers as well! Now I am really freaking out! So much for my plan!

http://www.bugclinic.com/bedbug.htm

Debi
DebitNM is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 04:56 PM
  #27  
Conversation Starter
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 27,868
Likes: 0
How to kill --

Wash infested sheets and bedding in hot water. Infested furniture can be set outside during cold weather to kill all stages of bed bugs. At 0° F, two days is sufficient to kill bed bugs while four to five days is required when the temperature is about 20° F.

Seal cracks and crevices where bed bugs may hide. Repair or remove loose wallpaper. Remove pictures, posters, or other objects that may act as hiding places.

Debi
DebitNM is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 04:57 PM
  #28  
 
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 4,203
Likes: 0
Oh, I missed your dresser comment. I don't like the way they smell, so I would keep everything but hanging stuff in the suitcase.
TxTravelPro is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 05:01 PM
  #29  
 
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 7,090
Likes: 0
DebitNM, I don't think that cold treatment will work unless you're a Polar Bear.
To those who asked, bedbugs are not what was referred to as cooties when we were in elementary school. Cooties are head lice. They are endemic in just about every elementary school in the US. We almost made it through elementary school without our daughter getting them...
Orcas is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 06:21 PM
  #31  
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 5,206
Likes: 0
you can use the cold/ or hot system, but still have to reach specific temperatures and be in sealed plastic bags - and you have to have your mattress and boxpring steam cleaned and spray everywhere - you can google 'how to kill bed bugs" and find it all there !! more , much more, than any of us want to know ----ick!
escargot is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 06:24 PM
  #32  
 
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 1,276
Likes: 0
I just ate dinner and think I'm going to puke.

I'm paranoid! I don't know if we have bedbugs or not. I've looked, but haven't seen anything. We have a dog who sometimes has fleas (hard to keep fleas at bay in Southern California).

Does anyone have pics that they themselves took of the bugs, the stains, the fecal material? Ewwww! Calm me down please!
lynnejoel1015 is offline  
Old Oct 24th, 2006 | 06:33 PM
  #33  
Conversation Starter
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 27,868
Likes: 0
lynnejoel...click on the link I posted...pictures of all things related to bedbugs there for you to see

ICK!!!!

Debi
DebitNM is offline  
Old Oct 25th, 2006 | 07:26 AM
  #34  
 
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 8,137
Likes: 0
Lynnjoel, boy do I feel your pain. I was trying to tell my DH about this thread and he got up and left the room! Was it something I said .? I think I would rather have "cooties" than bedbugs...or not.
Judyrem is offline  
Old Nov 4th, 2006 | 05:52 AM
  #35  
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 5,206
Likes: 0
another new bed bug story and info:
http://tinyurl.com/ybqmd7
escargot is offline  
Old Nov 4th, 2006 | 10:18 AM
  #36  
 
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 4,203
Likes: 0
Ewwww... I am SO FREAKIN LUCKY that I have not brought home these nasty critters. I have stayed at so many hotels... I have learned a huge lesson here.
-Inspect for bugs upon check in
-Use the luggage rack or table top for suitcase
-Don't use drawers (I never have)
-Unpack in garage, leaving suitcase out of the house
TxTravelPro is offline  
Old Nov 4th, 2006 | 02:44 PM
  #37  
 
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 1,225
Likes: 0
I really wonder about people. You can get malaria, typhoid, AIDS, etc. You can get run over by a bus, be accosted on the street, get in a car accident, contract E COLI, etc. Why have so many responses to bed bugs?
shaz60 is offline  
Old Nov 4th, 2006 | 06:28 PM
  #38  
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 8,394
Likes: 1
There IS a way to rid a room or house of bedbugs. You will not like it, but I know from personal experience that it works.

A good long time ago, I was a poor college student doing chemistry during the summer at a small Ivy League University in New Jersey. I stayed in a small room in the basement of a "club" (frat house). The club's kitchen had roaches, which was not so much of a problem, but my room was another story: Bedbugs. I was not amused.

Now, as a biochemistry major with an extensive mental collection of useless scientific trivia, I searched my memory and recalled an interesting fact: Cockroaches drive out bedbugs and eat their eggs. Natural exterminators were readily avaialble at no cost in the kitchen. I hired a jar full and brought them to my bed(bug)room.

Within a few days the bedbugs were no more. This victory was a bit Phyrric, as you can guess, as now I had a beroom infested with roaches. I was not amused, although I was no longer bitten.

I returned to the memory vault. Suddenly useful fact number 2: Roaches cannot recognize boric acid as poison, think it's sugar, eat it and die.

I sprinkled boric acid under furniture and in corners. Within a short time the roaches were gone.

Which leads to my theory of why bedbugs are appearing in hotels after decades of absence: Modern advances in roach control are now so good that hotels have been rendered roach free, eliminating the natural control of the bedbugs.

Or, in other words: The Roach Motel has brought us the Bedbug Bedroom!
AJPeabody is offline  
Old Nov 5th, 2006 | 04:16 AM
  #39  
OO
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 10,578
Likes: 0
Moral of AJ's story? Roaches in hotels are good things.
OO is offline  
Old Nov 5th, 2006 | 07:03 AM
  #40  
JJ5
 
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 16,253
Likes: 0
I never knew that roaches and bedbugs had that habitat relationship. Thanks.

No wonder they are making such a comeback.

In talking, someone just told me that Maya Rudolph from Saturday Night Live bought a very expensive place in NYC and can't live in it becase of the bedbug infestation problem. You would think that the roach poison would kill the bedbugs too! Well, maybe they are better hiders and don't ingest anything but blood.

I've worked in pharmaceutical pkg. plants and distribution points where I've picked up boxes and then dropped them down, and when I did roaches ran out of the box in all directions. Cured me of staying or doing any favors in carrying supplies back to the offices from/ by the receiving docks.

I never wore cuffs on pants or took my coat into my house when I worked out of the plants in pharmacy. I left all in the garage. Also never put my purse down on surfaces, but in a big shopping bag inside my drawer.
JJ5 is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Original Poster
Forum
Replies
Last Post
aa
United States
9
Apr 9th, 2009 05:55 AM
cindymal
United States
4
Dec 16th, 2005 12:11 AM
DonPats
United States
36
Dec 15th, 2005 03:56 PM
Heavens
United States
6
Jan 11th, 2005 10:28 AM
Annie
United States
8
Dec 8th, 2002 12:59 PM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are On



Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement -