Here There and Everywhere

Expat wanderer

Bedbug Renaissance Inn

We had just come back to Germany from our son’s graduation from law school, and woke up the next morning with welts – we didn’t know what they were. All we knew is suddenly, we had red itchy welts, and I was allergic to whatever they were.

We were lucky – we got in to see a doctor right away, and he told us what they were and what to do, and we did it and we never had another problem. He also told us that he was seeing this problem more and more – that many hotels have extra guests they never tell you about, even the very best hotels. (Our poor kitty – we had blamed her, we thought maybe she had brought in fleas, and it wasn’t her at all, it was hitch-hikers from Florida.)

What we learned from this truly awful experience is that bedbug infestations are happening everywhere. It’s something no one talks about out of shame, but with DDT off the market, and increasingly warm climates, they are on the increase.

To this day, I wash my sheets in hot hot water, and dry them on hot. And I think twice when I say to children, as is common in the USA “sleep tight, and don’t let the bed bugs bite!”

From AOL News:
(Nov. 7) – First come the bites, amazingly itchy, raised red welts that appear, literally, overnight. Then, you might notice scarlet spots on your sheets from smashed bugs or perhaps clusters of little black dots that you assume are dirt but are in fact constellations of fecal matter.

And one day, you might wake up in the wee hours of the morning, flip on the lights and find red bugs, slightly bigger than ticks, crawling on your sheets, pillows and legs.

Welcome to the most retro pest of the 21st century, the bedbug. The bugs, which were thought to be wiped out by powerful pesticides such as DDT 30 years ago, are back and infesting major urban areas, suburbia and the heartland.

You can read the entire horrifying story at AOL Health News.

USA Today’s List of How to Cope with a Bedbug Infestation:

Coping With Bedbugs: Advice From Experts
The best rule of thumb for dealing with bedbugs? Try not to get them in the first place.

Otherwise, read on:
Be careful where you put your suitcase when you travel. “These guys are fantastic hitchhikers,” says the University of Maryland’s Michael Raupp. “If you have a luggage rack with metal racks, put your suitcase on that.”

Check behind a hotel headboard. That’s one of their favorite spots, Raupp says. Pull back the comforter and sheets and look for the fecal stains on the mattress seams and ticking. Shine a penlight behind the headboard and look for dark fecal stains.

If you do wake up with red welts, assume the worst. “At that point, when you go home, all laundry goes into a trash bag outside, and then right into a washing machine on a hot cycle, and then a clothes dryer,” says the University of Kentucky’s Michael F. Potter. “As little as five or 10 minutes kills everything on high heat. Cold will not kill the eggs and not all the adults.”

Don’t pull mattresses and dressers off the street. Steer clear of yard sales or flea markets. And don’t ever buy used bedding.

If you do get them, don’t use a bomb or spray, which will only scatter them through your home. “Find a good pest-control company. This is not one where you buy bug spray and battle it yourself,” Potter says.

In many cases, pros suggest getting rid of your box spring and mattress, or if you can’t, using a bug-proof zippered mattress cover that traps the buggers inside for at least a year.

Source: USA Today

November 8, 2007 - Posted by | ExPat Life, Family Issues, Florida, Health Issues, Hygiene, News, Travel

7 Comments »

  1. I remember reading an article(very long time back), that another option to avoid bedbugs is the shift to steel furnitures(and start worrying about rust!)

    Joel's avatar Comment by Joel | November 8, 2007 | Reply

  2. I once got a very nasty case of bedbugs while staying at a very cheap beach cabina on the island of Tioman in Malaysia.

    It was gross and I didn’t want to blog about it because I was embarrassed, but you have emboldened me to mention it.

    To be honest, the scenery and surroundings were so spectacular that the bed bugs were worth it!! No one else in our group got them, so I think it was isolated to my cabina. Although it seems likely they would spread… There was definitely no hot water there for laundry. (It was literally 5 or 6 cabinas and a little shack restaurant plopped right onto a tiny beach, accessible only by boat, with thick jungle behind.)

    global gal's avatar Comment by global gal | November 9, 2007 | Reply

  3. It IS gross, and horrifying, Global Gal, and you feel dirty and awful. The doctor, thanks be to God, was very re-assuring, told us exactly how to clear ourselves up and it never happened again.

    And you are right, it is embarrassing to write about, and I thought twice, because you feel like EEEEWWWWWWWWWW! I wrote about it because it is on the increase, and people need to know that it can happen to anyone.

    The Malaysian cabanas sound heavenly – except for the bedbugs!

    Joel – you are right! It is one of the things the article mentions, to put your suitcase on a metal rack, not on the bed, that these critters sometimes hitchike on your bags.

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | November 9, 2007 | Reply

  4. Glad you did, if it ever happens I know now at least waht to do.
    Got the itchies all off a sudden though.. 🙂

    NicoleB's avatar Comment by rainmountain | November 9, 2007 | Reply

  5. Travelers should try Sleep-Safe Disposable Sheets which bedbugs cannot penetrate. The package contains two sheets and two pillowcases. They offer the protection you need and can be carried in a suitcase, overnight bag, purse or briefcase. Visit http://www.buysleepsafe.com.

    Gloria Camma's avatar Comment by Gloria Camma | November 9, 2007 | Reply

  6. How to kill pests without killing yourself or the earth……

    There are about 50 to 60 million insect species on earth – we have named only about 1 million and there are only about 1 thousand pest species – already over 50% of these thousand pests are already resistant to our volatile, dangerous, synthetic pesticide POISONS. We accidentally lose about 25,000 to 100,000 species of insects, plants and animals every year due to “man’s footprint”. But, after poisoning the entire world and contaminating every living thing for over 60 years with these dangerous and ineffective pesticide POISONS we have not even controlled much less eliminated even one pest species and every year we use/misuse more and more pesticide POISONS to try to “keep up”! Even with all of this expensive and unnecessary pollution – we lose more and more crops and lives to these thousand pests every year.

    We are losing the war against these thousand pests mainly because we insist on using only synthetic pesticide POISONS and fertilizers There has been a severe “knowledge drought” – a worldwide decline in agricultural R&D, especially in production research and safe, more effective pest control since the advent of synthetic pesticide POISONS and fertilizers. Today we are like lemmings running to the sea insisting that is the “right way”. The greatest challenge facing humanity this century is the necessity for us to double our global food production with less land, less water, less nutrients, less science, frequent droughts, more and more contamination and ever-increasing pest damage.

    National Poison Prevention Week, March 18-24,2007 was created to highlight the dangers of poisoning and how to prevent it. One study shows that about 70,000 children in the USA were involved in common household pesticide-related (acute) poisonings or exposures in 2004. At least two peer-reviewed studies have described associations between autism rates and pesticides (D’Amelio et al 2005; Roberts EM et al 2007 in EHP). It is estimated that 300,000 farm workers suffer acute pesticide poisoning each year just in the United States – No one is checking chronic contamination.
    In order to try to help “stem the tide”, I have just finished re-writing my IPM encyclopedia entitled: THE BEST CONTROL II, that contains over 2,800 safe and far more effective alternatives to pesticide POISONS. This latest copyrighted work is about 1,800 pages in length and is now being updated at my new website at http://www.stephentvedten.com/ .

    This new website at http://www.stephentvedten.com/ has been basically updated; all we have left to update is Chapter 39 and to renumber the pages. All of these copyrighted items are free for you to read and/or download. There is simply no need to POISON yourself or your family or to have any pest problems.

    Stephen L. Tvedten
    2530 Hayes Street
    Marne, Michigan 49435
    1-616-677-1261
    “An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come.” –Victor Hugo

    Stephen Tvedten's avatar Comment by Stephen Tvedten | November 9, 2007 | Reply

  7. Rainmountain – some very unlovely things accompany global warming, and increasingly resistant species – hospital/gym/school bacterial infections, lice, bedbugs, fleas . . . and those are just the things we are aware of. I hated to admit we had been bitten, it’s like something that happens but no one talks about it. It happens.

    Gloria – good suggestion! I have seen that mentioned in some of the Lonely Planet guides. You think you need to worry in “flea-bag” hotels, but the truth is – this happened to us in a very good hotel!

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | November 10, 2007 | Reply


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