Author Archives: Pest Controller

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  Friday 27th of September 2024 21:33 PM


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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Surprising Places Bed Bugs Can Hide – ConsumerReports.org

The steps you take should depend on your personal preferences and the particular environments youre dealing with, experts say. Consider the following:

Know what a bed bug looks like. These small, disc-shaped bugs can be seen with the naked eye, as can their fecal matterpeppercorn-sized black spots.

Be attentivewhere its warranted. Theres little need to keep your eyes constantly peeled for bed bugs, Miller says. But its reasonable to look for signs of them in places where people live and/or sleep, especially where they receive a lot of visitors, such as nursing homes and hospitals.

Other places people may want to be cognizant of are lounging areas with lots of public traffic, such as sofas in public libraries, waiting rooms, and public transportation settings, Potter says.

Protect your belongings. If you suspect a problem in your office, school, or another location, store your coats, handbags, and any other items that youll bring home away from those of other people.

If you know of a problem at your office, keep your personal belongings in a closed plastic bin. If its your childs school, ask to have his or her things secured in the same way.

Treat with heat. Concerned that you or your child might have brought home a stray bed bug? Try this DIY strategy (but don't rely on it for an infestation): Toss clothes, blankets, and plush toys that have come home from your child's school in a hot dryer for 30 minutes.

Reactbut dont overreactif you see one. If you spot a bed bug, remain calm. One bug does not an infestation make. Instead, ask who handles these issues in the location you've spotted the bug init may be management and/or the facilities staffand report what youve seen.

(Management should take quick action if a bed bug is seen on premisesalerting those in the building, examining the area to determine whether its a single stray or a sign of bigger problems, and dealing with an infestation promptly.)

Be vigilant at nursing homes. If you have a loved one in a nursing home, you should be inspecting his or her bed regularly, not relying on people there to do it, Miller says. Thatmeans carefully examining the mattress and headboard (and wheelchair, if applicable) each time you visit, and checking your relative for any signs of biteskeeping in mind that they may not display any.

Consider encasing your relatives mattress and box spring with bug-proof covers, and reduce clutter to give any bed bugs fewer places to hide.

Call in experts at the right time. Think youhave a bed bug problem at home? When in doubt, have an experienced pest control person come to your home and perform a detailed inspection, Potter says.

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Surprising Places Bed Bugs Can Hide - ConsumerReports.org

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NCPMA’s tips: Traveling without bed bugs – Montgomery Herald

State pest management association offers tips for preventing spread of bed bugs

Raleigh, N.C. Summer travel seasons kicks off this weekend and the North Carolina Pest Management Association (NCPMA) is urging North Carolinians to be vigilant in protecting themselves from bed bug infestations.

Bed bugs are easy to transport from one place to another. Whether youre staying in a hotel, rental property, dorm or summer camp, its important to inspect the property for signs of a bed bug infestation, said Clint Miller, NCPMA board member. Just a few simple steps can prevent an infestation in your own home.

Bed bugs are small insects that are often found in mattresses and upholstered furniture and behind baseboards and wallpaper. They can easily spread from room to room within a single building.

To prevent bed bugs, use the following tips from NCPMA:

Inspect

Before sleeping in a bed at a hotel, rental property, camp or dorm, check the mattress, bed sheets, and headboard for tell-tale blood spots or signs of bed bugs.

If signs of bed bugs are spotted, alert the hotel or rental property staff. Each hotel or rental property should have a Bed Bug Management Plan in place to assist you as the problem is addressed.

Vacuum suitcases after returning from a vacation, summer camp or dorm and throw away the vacuum bag or clean the canister. Wash all clothing from the suitcases in hot water.

Prepare

Consider bringing a large plastic trash bag in which to store your suitcase during stays at hotels, rental properties, dorms or camps.

Carry a flashlight with you to inspect mattresses and furniture in your vacation property.

Read Bed Bugs: Your Guide to Prevention, Detection & Treatment, a NCPMA booklet available through our member companies.

Call

Seek professional pest management to address an infestation. Trying to treat a problem without a professional can make the problem worse and more costly.

To learn more about NCPMA or to locate a pest professional, please visit its Web site at: http://www.ncpestmanagement.org.

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NCPMA's tips: Traveling without bed bugs - Montgomery Herald

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itching all over – is it bed bugs? – Lonely Planet

Hi, hopefully someone can offer some advice on my current itching problem..?!

About 3 weeks ago i woke up and found myself itching all over. My first reaction is it was something from the bed but i have never had anything like this before so dont know and didnt know how to check at the time so just moved hotel. I have researched bed bugs now and it sounds like them but maybe not i am not sure?! I feel the itching all day but in keeping with bed bugs i get it in my sleep at night, probably the worst but not every night, though with time it seems to be getting worse so again that could be the eggs hatching and multiplying in numbers maybe?

I dont have any bite marks, though i have read this is common but i cant see any bugs on me at all anywhere and after reading many guides and advice on looking for them, i can't find them in my current room anywhere.

My understanding is that i probably picked them up from a bed and since then they have been on me but they dont live on me - is that right? - does that mean that at night they leave my body to live on anything close by and that when i go to sleep they, being nocturnal,they travel from their hiding places and feed on me and then leave me again by next morning? Is the continual itching through the day therefore from the bites the night before, not from them still on my body?

Before washing and treating all my clothes and belongings i want to understand what i have and then the best way to try and get rid. I plan to take all my clothes and bags to the laundry and wash on 60 degrees and clean everything else with a spray mixture of dettol and baby oil, which i use already as a mosquito repellent and have read elsewhere this kills the bugs but not any eggs apparently. So if i have eggs on me, and i cant kill them, but can kill all the bugs on me and my possessions, doesnt that mean that when the eggs hatch i am faced with the same continual problem until finally i kill them all and by chance kill the egg layers too?

I am going today to try see a local doctor but unsure i will get the right advice so i hope someone can help me on here too.

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itching all over - is it bed bugs? - Lonely Planet

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Smarter Treatments for Bed Bugs – Smarter Pest Control

If you are battling bed bugs, dont compromise. Get the most trusted, most professional thermal remediation bed bug specialists throughout North and South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Louisiana.

When it comes to protecting your home or business from bed bugs, Gregory Pest Solutions plays hard ball with our state-of-the-art Thermal Remediation Heat Treatment process. It allows us to quickly eliminate bed bugs with minimal preparation or inconvenience.

Our system uses specially designed industrial strength electric heaters to heat the inside of the treated area to a temperature above 120 F. in order to kill bed bugs and their eggs that might be inside of cracks, crevices, furniture, fixtures, and other belongings.

Gregory has bed bug sniffing dogs available when needed such as multiple apartments, hotel rooms or large buildings. Their keen sense of smell allows our experts to find bed bugs and destroy them quickly and efficiently.

Fast, effective solutions for

The Thermal Remediation process allows you or your residents to leave practically everything in the home or other treated areas - clothing, bedding, furniture, TV, computers: almost everything can be left in place. As a matter of fact, it is important that they do leave everything in place, because bed bugs or their eggs can be in or on anything, and our bed bug exterminators don't want to let any survive.

Gregory's Thermal Remediation Heat Treatment equipment is a self-contained system that utilizes space heaters and monitoring devices which are powered by the system and monitored throughout the process to achieve a safe and effective level of heat within the treated areas. The heat kills all stages of Bed Bugs: eggs, young, and adults.

A heat treatment involves the following steps:

Thermal Remediation and related logo is a trademark owned by TEMP-AIR, Inc. and is used by permission.

Call Gregory Pest Solutions for help with bed bug Thermal Remediation treatment at 1-800-922-2596 or use our email form to contact us today.

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Smarter Treatments for Bed Bugs - Smarter Pest Control

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The bedbug letter – Casper Star-Tribune Online

I dont know if its true, but if not, urban legends have a truth to tell.

The narrative is of a supposed incident in which the American Pullman Car Company had received a complaint about a bug infestation in one of its sleeping cars in 1889.

Supposedly, Mr. Phineas P. Jenkins, a salesman of pig-iron products for the Monongahela Ironworks Company of Pittsburgh, was traveling in a Pullman car on the New York Central Railroad and found that his berth was infested with bedbugs.

Jenkins wrote a letter to the company describing his disgusting accommodations.

As the story goes, he later received a hugely apologetic and detailed reply:

The car was located on March 8, immediately removed from passenger service and sidetracked in a remote area until it could be transported by a specially dispatched locomotive to our maintenance facility at Alton, Illinois. There, it has been stripped of all furnishings. The bedding, upholstery, curtains, carpet and all other combustible materials have been burned. The toilets and their fixtures have been scrubbed down and sterilized with carbolic acid. By the time you receive this letter, the car will have been fumigated and steam cleaned from end to end.

The intended effect was sspoiled, however, because enclosed with the letter was a handwritten note by George Pullman to his secretary, Sarah send this (expletive) the bedbug letter.

Evidently, this bedbug letter was the mass produced letter everyone received who complained about bugs. Two similar stories are recorded to have originated in 1917 and 1941.

Sometimes we treat people like this. We send them the bedbug letter, the form letter, that pretends we have heard them and that they matter to us.

In our hurriedness, we ask, How are you? when we dont really have space or energy to care. We say Let me know if I can do anything, hoping they dont take us up on our pretend offer. Sometimes we actually say, Im so sorry, when we are honestly just relieved that it isnt us.

Maybe Mark Twain was right when he said, You should never tell people your problems because 80 percent of them wont care, and the other 20 percent will think you deserve them!

As a Christ follower, one who is on a journey to know and love God, I am encouraged to be compassionate. To care about those in my world; to be present in their pain.

Every single day we come in contact with at least one other human being, a person made in the very likeness of God. We all have something in common: we are all fighting a battle on some front. A wayward kid, an ailing parent, a divorce, a death, a lost job, a dashed dream.

I dont want to simply send another image bearer the bedbug letter.

Lets not give those in our sphere of influence the passing nod of pretending we care. Instead, lets choose to clothe ourselves in compassion. Lets make eye contact, listen carefully, ask meaningful questions and help, if we can.

God is always moved by our suffering, our struggle, our sorrow. So much so that he sent not a bedbug letter but the Son. Shouldnt our lives reflect the same kind of heart?

Larry and Linda Kloster sponsor this column.

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The bedbug letter - Casper Star-Tribune Online

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