Letters to the Editor

Letters posted here are associated with the following article:
Bugs in your bed Itchy welts? Drops of blood in the sheets? Bedbug infestations are on the rise -- and they're coming to a mattress near you.
The letters thread is now closed.
  • Get Some Freshwater Diatomaceous Earth

    I had a problem with silverfish which colonized my summer home during the winter. I discovered diatomaceous earth, since I couldn't call an exterminator due to my pet birds.

    Diatomaceous earth (not the kind used in swimming pools, but the insecticide form) should be applied with a duster. You can buy a duster and the diatomaceous earth online. It takes about a day to figure out how to load and use the duster, but it is crucial because it delivers a fine "spray" of DE which clings to surfaces, but is very light. I won't go into exact details about how I used the DE in my home (remove all light switch and electrical outlet covers and spray void spaces, remove pictures and spray all along the edges, spray along windowsills, spray curtains, bookcases, books, furniture, etc.)

    But I will tell you that I spray DE with a duster inside my luggage (before packing) and on the outside of my luggage to prevent bringing home any potential hitchhiker bedbugs. So far, so good. The DE is not as thick as dust (unless you want to make it thick like dust, which I did initially in areas where I had seen silverfish). I reapply a fine layer of DE on my luggage -- just in case -- each time I travel. It sounds like a tremendous amout of work, but once you get the hang of using the duster, it's no biggie.

    Oh, and if you want to use DE to eliminate bedbugs, first you need to vacuum. Make a little pile of loose DE. Spray with an insecticide. Vacuum up into your vacuum bag. Now use a crevice tool and a furniture brush to vacuum up any live bugs and as many eggs as you can. The insecticide dust inside your vac should kill any bugs you vacuum up. I took some HotShot oil-based insecticide in a pump sprayer and sprayed the cracks between the wall and the floor (except in the room where I keep my birds). Then I sprayed DE along the wall/floor area I had just sprayed with the oil-based insecticide. The next day, I applied a fine layer of DE again in those areas. In the room where I keep my birds, I used DE only.

    It worked. I still occasionally grab the duster and use it, particularly if I see a silverfish, which is now a rare occurence. DE worked very well on some houseplants recently when they became infested with spider mites. Some people use DE outside, particularly for slugs, but I don't because I garden and DE kills bumble bees and honey bees and I don't want that. They are my champion pollinators.

    Anyway, you may want to try the DE for luggage if you travel a lot. Or even if you only travel occasionally. Diatomaceous earth is all-natural.. it consists of microscopic dead bodies of prehistoric shellfish.

  • Missing page of the interview?

    Um, heLLO?!? Where was Page 3? You know, the one about how to get RID of the damn things?!?

    Why on earth get an expert on the phone without asking him about that?

    jTh.

  • Bedbug Precautions for Travelling

    Strip your hotel bed when you first arrive and look for bedbug signs along the mattress and in the box spring. Also check the headboard.

    There are also precautions you can take to avoid bringing bedbugs home. Old fashioned, hard metal suitcases are better than cloth ones, because bedbugs can't grip on to metal. Always keep your luggage closed and on a luggage rack, away from the bed, or in the bathtub. You can also keep your clothes in plastic bags and then throw them in a hot wash and dry before putting them away or even bringing them into your home.

    Bedbug bites are often first mistaken for mosquito bites, but they linger for weeks. They can also blow up into welts and cause asthma. They can take up to nine days to appear because the poison from their saliva has to work it's way through your system.

    Perhaps global warming is another cause of the increase in bedbugs?

  • I know this won't be PC

    but you've got to look at the dramatic change in hotel housekeeping staffing which is now almost entirely made up of immigrants, legal and otherwise...

    I had occasion to work in a couple of New Orleans hotels in a capacity which took me from the loftiest penthouse suites to the filthy waste-oil disposal containers on the basement loading docks and I speak from that experience: virtually every service occupation is now dominated by immigrant groups.

    Leave the gilded 'front' of any four star hotel for five minutes and you'll find youself in 'back-of'the-house' which might as well be in any benighted 3rd World country you can name.

  • EWWWW.

    My goodness. This makes me feel better about the expensive, anti-microbial mattress I paid too much for this past weekend. It claims to not let in dust mites, let alone bedbugs.

  • How we treated for an infestation

    My husband and I recently dealt with an infestation of bat bugs, similar to bed bugs, that came into our house from bats that found their way into our attic. As anyone who has had to deal with a bed bug infestation knows, they are really difficult to get rid of (and my heart goes out to anyone living in a multi-family dwelling because then the difficulty increases exponentially as they can be eradicated in one unit, then travel back if they're not eliminated in ALL units). The problem is, if you have just one egg-bearing female in your apartment or home, or even just one egg that hatches into a female that is then able to get enough blood meals to mature, you can end up with an infestation. Some people don't react to the bites so they don't know they have bed bugs until they're quite widespread. We thought we were getting spider bites but then I found one of the bugs in our bed when I was making it up one morning. Cabrera is right. Finding insects in your bed and thinking about them crawling on you and feeding on you while you're asleep is super creepy.

    For people who do react, the bites are generally found in twos and threes (or more), often along a vein. They can be very, very VERY itchy; sometimes they throb and ache. They can get infected easily. They take a long time to clear up. Reaction times vary as it may take a while for someone to develop a sensitivity. So you might not realize you're getting bitten (in a hotel, say) for a day or two. Which makes them easier to spread. They're exquisitely adapted for survival and dispersal, unfortunately.

    This is what we had to do to get rid of them, and even then, it took three treatments by pest control professionals: Launder in hot water or dry clean every article of clothing we owned. Ditto for all linens, fabrics, carpets, wall-hangings, etc. We had to remove everything from every shelf, drawer, and closet so that the pest control guys could treat our furniture and closets, as the bugs will hide there. We had to take the covers to all our switch plates and outlet plugs off because they will get inside your walls via those routes. We had to remove the lighting fixtures near our bed, too. We had to pull every stick of furniture away from the walls so that the baseboards could be treated. We have our futon/buton combination on a platform, so I took that apart and sealed every single crack and crevice. We put our futon and buton in a mattress cover designed for dust mites and were advised to keep it on there for eighteen months. We vacuumed every speck of our bedroom and adjoining office. Then we had our first treatment of pyrethrins (a contact poison), a residual (ground limestone and cornmeal applied along the baseboards, window trim, tongue-in-groove ceiling, etc.), and a hormone that prevents the males from maturing. This three-pronged attack is recommended by most professionals, to my knowledge. Three weeks later, we did it again. We went away for two weeks, and when we came back, we got a few more bites, so we treated a third time. It's important not to vacuum after the treatments so that you don't remove the residual. And of course, we had to get the bats out of our attic, which was a whole ordeal in and of itself.

    This, as you can imagine was a ton of work. It was exhausting. And we're still not moved back in until we're absolutely sure the bugs are gone. We haven't had any bites or seen any sign of them for three weeks, so we're cautiously optimistic that we finally eliminated them. I've heard that if, after a month, there are no signs of them, you can reasonably safely assume you're in the clear. You could skip some of the above steps I mentioned, but again, remember, if you miss just one, you can have a re-infestation on your hands. It's worth being thorough the first time.

    Another thing you can do, while you're getting rid of these insects, is to move your bed away from the wall and coat the legs of the bed with Vaseline or wrap them in carpet tape--this is if you're sure your bed itself is safe. This can prevent ones that reside elsewhere from getting in your bed.

    In a multi-unit dwelling, it goes without saying, every unit needs to be treated, but the cost of this is pretty staggering and it's not suprising some landlords would not want to do this. But it does seem that this increase could well be headed for an epidemic if this pest is not dealt with aggressively and immediately. I react quite strongly to the bites. They're horrible. And I haven't had a really good night's sleep since we realized what we were dealing with. It's worth taking precautions while you're traveling to avoid bringing them home. Some experts recommend traveling with a black plastic garbage bag and placing your luggage in it and sealing it closed when you stay in hotels. Of course, don't unpack your bags. A pain, but much less of a pain than trying to rid your home or apartment of them after the fact.

    Good luck to anyone having to deal with this awful situation.

    Celeste White

Most Active Stories

Read More

Letters Help

Daily Delivery

Salon headlines in your mailbox