One morning a few months ago Sheila White and her boyfriend, Keith O’Neill, woke up with itchy pink raised welts on their arms and legs. Since they often spend hot nights with their windows open, they thought the problem was mosquitoes. But when the bites got worse and no flying culprit appeared in their New York apartment, the pair turned to the Internet. The real perp? Bed bugs. Those childhood warnings to not let the bed bugs bite are taking on new meaning in beds from New York to Los Angeles—and many beds in between. Although the insects do not transmit disease, living with these bloodsuckers can be traumatic. And the problem is growing in both cities and the suburbs. Today, the infestations are “nearly an epidemic in Manhattan and other U.S. cities,” says Robert Pineiro, a supervisor for Terminix in White Plains, New York.
“Of all the insects that invade your home, bed bugs are the worst, because they are hard to control and even harder to prevent,” says Richard Pollack, Ph.D., an entomologist at the Harvard School of Public Health. The bugs hide close to their warm-blooded prey in mattresses, box springs, floorboards and clothing. They usually remain out of sight during the day, making them hard to find and difficult to completely eliminate. Even when you’re bitten, the anesthetic the bugs inject numb you to the fact that it is happening. The only trace they’ll leave—apart from the welts—is blood-or feces-stained sheets.
Coming to a subway near you:
A city bedbug expert has seen bedbugs on the subway benches at the Union Square subway station and the Fordham Road station, according to the NY Post. The Post also adds that Edward Brownbear also saw a bedbug, “in one case, catching a ride on an unsuspecting straphanger’s caboose at Brooklyn’s Hoyt-Schermerhorn station.” Quick, everyone buy disposable jumpers to wear during commutes!
Great, I have guests coming in from the city next week…..guess I’ll have to fumigate them first!
Funny thing…
that in the past, we used Boric acid in Bedding, and in Rugs, to dissuade and kill MOST insects…
Whats happened??
#1. Apparently they eat Boric Acid as a snack.
There is a mattress and pillow sealer that you can buy that prevents dust-mites from getting through. Sort of like a mattress “condom”. I am allergic to dust-mites, so I bought one. Works great!
It also work for beg-bugs to a certain degree. It at least prevents them from hiding in the mattress and pillows. You still have to wash and poison your sheets and blankets.
http://tinyurl.com/4fyubb
For those who travel, you can buy at travel stores a silk sleeping sack. Hotel/Motel/Hostel beds can be scary.
http://tinyurl.com/4s39ry
Time to bring back DDT?
#4 Yes
Also why are Americans so dirty? This is not a problem in other subways. From Spain to Japan this is not a problem, just asking.
#5, How many Hotels have you slept in from Spain to Japan?
For those who don’t know about ’em:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedbug
5,
there is a funny trick with LICE…
Clean hair attracts them..
I also wonder about people that Kill every insect in a YARD…and dont understand, that all they are doing, is clearing OUT room for everyone AROUND his home’s, insects. Insects from Around the area think this nice barren area is wonderful, and they dont have to fight spiders and other insects to get there.
then we have herbicides and insect repellent CROPS…and where do the insects go?? NOT in the crops. there is nothing to eat/CANT eat there.
This could be a result of moving the homeless of NYC underground, where they’re less seen. Those bugs have got to live off of something. Has NYC cut the funds to keep the subways clean? Or just for providing the homeless some decent shelters? We can spend billions to make Iraq a democracy. But screw providing our own poor with the basics of life. I quess that’s because they’re not sitting on any rich oil fields. Our leaders’ reasoning is so transparently false.
“Baby, I swear these crabs came from the subway”