Monthly Archives: March 2015

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Lambs Farm battling bed bug infestation

LIBERTYVILLE, Ill. (WLS) --

Lambs Farm says the bed bugs have been found in six of its 11 residential buildings. There have been chemical and heat treatments and specially-trained dogs have even brought in to spot the bugs, but the problem continues.

The infestation began last September in one of the group homes on the sprawling, 72-acre campus in north suburban Libertyville.

"They say you can get them from an airplane, from anywhere. All it takes is for one person to come in with them on their clothes or something I guess," said Dianne M. Yaconetti, Lambs Farm president and CEO.

After exterminators were brought in, the bed bugs were thought to be gone, only to turn up in more residential buildings. An unspecified number of residents reported minor bites.

"Every time it was detected in a room the staff would have to go in, take all the clothes out, wash them in a certain temperature, and be very careful with how everything was handled," Yaconetti said.

For the last 50 years, Lambs Farm has helped adults with special needs lead productive lives. More than 200 people live here and work in the various businesses, which include a petting zoo, stores, a restaurant and a bakery.

Now, the non-profit that helps people overcome their challenges, continues to deal with one of its own.

"The problem is that we don't know where it came from, and so if it came from a resident that went on a trip or came from a home visit or something we have no guarantee that that won't happen again," Yaconetti said.

Lambs Farm says this is the first time they've had a problem with bed bugs. And they say OSHA and the Illinois Department of Public Health have had inspectors here, and they've complied with all recommendations.

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Lambs Farm battling bed bug infestation

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Explosions at UVA-Wise, medicinal cannabis effort, bed bugs close library and more stories you may have missed

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March 15th, 2015 10:00 am by Staff Report

Take a look back at some of the most interesting and important stories this past week on TimesNews.net.

* Kingsport officials have no plans to remove bike lanes on Center

There are no plans afoot nor support among city leaders to change Center Street through downtown back to the way it used to be. In short, the road diet and bike lanes are here to stay.

* Dozens of explosions at UVA-Wise rattle residents

After three weeks of being slammed by crippling snow, sleet, freezing rain, ice and, to top all that off, floods, folks in and around the Town of Wise on Tuesday were understandably rattled by the repeated sound of explosions in the vicinity of The University of Virginia's College at Wise.

* Local mother advocates for the legalization of cannabis oil to help combat daughter's seizures

Infantile spasms are a specific type of seizure, occurring within the first year of life, seen in an epilepsy syndrome of infancy, according to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Some infants can have dozens of clusters and several hundred spasms per day.

* Couple rescue puppy in garbage bag dumped on the side of Hawkins road

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Explosions at UVA-Wise, medicinal cannabis effort, bed bugs close library and more stories you may have missed

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Canadian Tire Green Earth Green Earth Bed Bug Killer Dust …

answer 1

Green Earth Homecare Bed Bug & Crawling Insect Killer Dust contains the active ingredient Silicon Dioxide, also known as Diatomaceous Earth. This active is a naturally occurring, soft, siliceous sedimentary rock that is easily crumbled into a fine off-white powder. It consists of the fossilized remains of diatoms, a type of hard-shelled algae. We do use a food grade Diatomaceous earth, as well as two food grade attractants of yeast and honey. Diatomaceous Earth does not control insects by toxicity, but by cutting action. Once the powder scratches, or cuts the insect it literally dries them up causing death within as little as 48 hours. Our Diatomaceous Earth products are safe to use around your children and pets, provided the products are applied in a manner that will avoid inhalation of the dust.

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PremierGardenAssistant

answer 2

Green Earth Homecare Bed Bug & Crawling Insect Killer Dust contains the active ingredient Silicon Dioxide, also known as Diatomaceous Earth. This active is a naturally occurring, soft, siliceous sedimentary rock that is easily crumbled into a fine off-white powder. It consists of the fossilized remains of diatoms, a type of hard-shelled algae. We do use a food grade Diatomaceous earth, as well as two food grade attractants of yeast and honey. Diatomaceous Earth does not control insects by toxicity, but by cutting action. Once the powder scratches, or cuts the insect it literally dries them up causing death within as little as 48 hours.

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Canadian Tire Green Earth Green Earth Bed Bug Killer Dust ...

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Patrick Guilfoile: Eternal rest for bedbugs | Bemidji Pioneer

Posted on Mar 8, 2015 at 12:40 a.m.

Consequently, measures are urgently needed to determine whether bedbugs are present in a dwelling, in order to implement control measures. Yet these small creatures are notoriously difficult to find, and current methods for detecting bed bugs are somewhat clunky and expensive.

The good news is that researchers from Simon Fraser University in Canada recently reported the recipe for the signal that bedbugs use to find one another.

This should make it much easier to rouse the little critters from their hiding places and determine whether they are causing an infestation, and it might also be useful for exterminating them.

The first step in conducting these experiments was to grow a colony of bed bugs. This was a challenging prospect, as bed bugs only feed on blood. One of the scientists in the study, a member of a husband and wife research team, volunteered her arms for nearly 200,000 bites to keep the colony healthy and growing. (Her husband apparently wasnt a suitable donor, as he developed a severe itch when bitten.) As a consequence of all this feeding, the bed bugs produced a large volume of shed skin and feces, which was the raw material for isolating the aggregation signal.

The scientists used chemicals to extract the key components that caused bed bugs to aggregate from 18,000 of their shed skins. It took about 18 months to collect the number of skins needed for their experiments.

They also allowed 300 bed bugs to poop on pieces of paper for a month, and then analyzed the fecal material contained on the paper with a machine called a gas chromatograph/mass spectrophotometer to detect the various individual components excreted by the bed bugs.

To test whether they found the correct compound, the researchers put bed bugs in a central round glass container, connected by small tubular passageways to two other containers with either a control scent or a test scent they had extracted from bed bug skin and feces. They then allowed the bed bugs to roam the chambers overnight, and determined where they ended up the next morning. If the bed bugs were attracted to the test scent over the control scent, the researchers knew they were on to something. By testing a variety of compounds isolated from the bed bug skins and feces, the researchers ultimately determined that a cocktail of histamine plus five other volatile chemicals was sufficient to attract and keep bed bugs in place. As the final test, the scientists went into infested apartments in Vancouver, British Columbia, and determined that their scent mixtures did effectively attract bed bugs in the wild.

This research will hopefully lead to more effective ways of detecting and eliminating bed bugs from a dwelling, and thereby eliminate the rashes and sleepless nights experienced by people who share their homes with these nasty little creatures.

More information is available in the article by Regine Gries and others entitled Bed Bug Aggregation Pheromone Finally Identified in Angewandte Chemie 54: 1135-1138, January, 2015.

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Patrick Guilfoile: Eternal rest for bedbugs | Bemidji Pioneer

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Bed bugs discovery closes Rogersville senior center, library

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March 12th, 2015 12:33 pm by Jeff Bobo

ROGERSVILLE - The Rogersville Senior Center and H.B. Stamps Public Library, which share a building in downtown Rogersville, were evacuated Thursday around noon afterbedbugswere detected during a routine pest inspection.

Hawkins County Mayor Melville Bailey said a pest control contractor reported that the bed bugs were discovered in the hallway that connects the senior center and the library.

That hallway is carpeted, has cloth furniture, and contains restrooms used by both the library and senior center.

(The exterminator) thinks the bedbugs are confined to the foyer, Bailey said. We called the state health department and they recommended we close the senior citizens center and the library since they are adjoining.

Bailey said the pest control inspection Thursday was routine and there were no previous complaints of infestation prior to the exterminator's report late Thursday morning.

About 25 people were in the senior center when the evacuation was ordered. To his knowledge, no one from the library or senior center has complained of bites, Bailey added.

As seniors left the Senior Center they were informed of Health Department recommendations on how to prevent spreading an infestation.

Seniors were told to go home, remove their clothing, place it in a bag, and take a thorough shower. Then they should wash the clothing in hot water and then dry it in a dryer on the hottest setting.

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Bed bugs discovery closes Rogersville senior center, library

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