Don`t let the bedbugs bite

Bed Bug on mattress
Spying a beautiful mattress abandoned by the roadside near her home, Nadia did not take it as a warning. It looked clean and relatively new, so she took it for her apartment. She lugged it up the steps, into her home in the Montreal Plateau, dragging it towards her bedroom. Then she happened to glance down and notice the felt marker writing, scrawled on the back-side of the mattress: BEDBUGS!

With bedbugs on the rise in many major cities, the bedbug has become the new bogey monster, haunting the media, and appearing in unexpected places like the cinema, the airport, and even the workplace. But is the scare really justified? Bringing the subject up to my grandfather, who had dealt with bedbugs prior to DDT, he chuckled and agreed they were a pest; it took 3 months cleaning to be free of the nuisance. Yet many recent cases, employing modern pesticides have offered less results. `The exterminator has sprayed five times already, and we`re still getting bitten. It`s been five months now. I`m really sick of this!“, said Dominic, a Montreal tenant, echoing the complaint of many apartment dwellers. When it comes to de-bugging, it is important to be well informed, and to engage a knowledgeable company, one that does at least two visits, and will take measures to prevent re-infestation from neighbouring living spaces. While bedbugs do present cause for concern, we should be able to travel, go to the movies, stay at hotels, hostels, and friends` homes without constantly worrying about catching the bug. It is possible to decrease the risk by taking some precautions.

• Make sure not to pick up any infested materials, such as furniture or electronics. Inspect items carefully before bringing them into your home. It is not advisable to pick up used mattresses.
• Keep in mind that bedbugs can be found in many places of transience, such as hotels, hospitals, residences, airports, and movie theatres.
• Keep luggage away from walls and furniture when staying somewhere that may be infested. Luggage may also be protected by placing in a garbage bag, tied shut.
• When returning from travels, do not bring backpacks and suitcases directly into the house. Bag items before taking them in. Any materials that can be machine washed or dried, wash them hot, and/or place them in the drier. Depending on the material, some bags and suitcases can be cleaned with a steam cleaner.
Infestations can begin with a single bug, so it is important to be thorough when dealing with this problem. Detection dogs, dogs trained to sniff out the offending critters, are able to pick up on bedbugs when even experts have trouble detecting low levels of infestation. If you think you have bedbugs at home, there is no need to use conventional pesticides. From our experience, many pesticides can aggravate a problem by causing the bedbugs to disperse, spreading throughout a building. A steam cleaner can be an invaluable tool in the fight against bedbugs, as it can be used to treat the mattress, bedframe, and other materials in the room. Bedbugs are very sensitive to heat and at just 46⁰C will die in less than 10 minutes! From our experience, steam treatment and heat treatments are the best approach, as they target even the eggs of the bedbugs, which most pesticides cannot do. Unavoidably, a bedbug infestation means time for some serious cleanup. Clutter will need to be removed and often much clothing and bedding needs to be washed hot, and dried to get rid of the bugs. Below are some tips for dealing with an infestation:

• Treat cracks and crevasses in room with diatomaceous earth. This can be found at the hardware store under the names Insectigone, or Insect Stop.
• Use a steam cleaner on your bedframe, especially to clean joints and screw-holes. Your mattress and furniture, if appropriate, may be cleaned with the steam cleaner. Note that dry steamers are often recommended.
• Use a zippered mattress cover for your mattress and box-spring
• Apply petroleum jelly around legs of bed. Place bowls, or trays under each leg of bed and fill with diatomaceous earth. See our site for more information: www.ecobugdoctor.com

When Nadia realized she had brought bedbugs to her apartment, she immediately threw out the infested mattress, washed her clothes and took a shower before cleaning the hallway she had dragged the mattress through. Luckily she saved herself from an infestation, and a visit with our bedbug detection dogs confirmed that no bedbugs were present. While bedbugs are a major problem, they can be overcome without using conventional pesticides, through thorough cleaning and use of ecological products. Though there is much debate as to the best ways of dealing with bedbugs, one thing bedbug experts can agree on is that it is much easier to prevent an infestation than it is to get rid of the critters once they are established.

* Note: Names of those interviewed have been changed, as they did not wish to be identified

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2 Comments

  1. Barbara Alfonso said,

    November 20, 2010 at 4:51 pm

    Hi, glad to have found you in my general area. So far, we have not come into contact with any bedbugs. We are planning to take a cruise in the spring and I am a little bit worried that the ship my harbor some nasty critters that will hitch a ride home or perhaps on the trip there and back a stray bug will attach itself to our luggage. What precautions should I take prior to packing to make our luggage bed bug unfriendly?

    • November 23, 2010 at 4:34 pm

      Hi Barbara,
      When it comes to travel, I usually prefer not to worry about bugs in the luggage until I get home. At that point I just leave everything in a garbage bag outside. When I get a chance I’ll throw all the clothes into the washing machine or drier, for a full cycle. As for the luggage itself, (and any other travel items I might be worried about) I usually pass the steam cleaner over the whole thing once before storing it.
      Otherwise, during the vacation itself, it is best to keep luggage away from the bed– and some people go as far as to wrap the whole thing in a garbage bag to make it bedbug-proof. Lastly, lemon eucalyptus oil can kill the bugs, and may be helpful as a repellent if used on the luggage.
      Hope this is helpful, and wish you a great bug-free vacation!


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