Captured a bed bug, looks like a nymph. It has been sitting comfortably in a
ziplock bag of Chinchilla Dust with no ill effects...almost 30 hours now.
Will need to experiment if DE works. Any local store that carries DE or I have to order it online?
BTW the next gen bed bugs are hitting our home now - and I can tell this problem is here for the long haul. Seriously considering monitors.
There was a posting recommending Chinchilla in the New York Times blog site discussion on bed bugs - see below for the verbatim writeup.
I found it easily at petsmart (locally) and it seems to me shares properties with DE, but is less toxic.
---------------
I'm a former pest control guy and public health inspector in the Seattle area. I
have expertise that you will not find so easily and here's what I would do.
This is my own personal discovery and you will not get this information from
anyone else no matter how expert. You can treat your whole house, furniture,
everything for about 10 bucks. Use chinchilla dust bath. It's made of
diatomaceous earth and it kills anything with an exoskeleton, roaches, fleas,
bedbugs, yellowjacks, you name it. You can buy it at a pet store. Sprinkle it or
puff it with condiment squeeze bottle or something similar, work it in with a
wisk broom, vacuum the excess and you've nailed them. Don't hire an expensive
pest control firm that will spray toxic chemicals.
My method is better, cheaper, safer and effective. Sprinkle some on your dog too
and you'll save money on your flea control problems too.I can hear you going
"huh, chinchilla dust bath?" Yes, chinchilla dust bath.
— Zac Segal
September 20, 2009
September 18, 2009
Bed Bug Monitor for the house
Just got a bid of $3000 - propane treatment includes K-9 and 2 followups.
Warranty - 30 days after the inital treatment
Targeted treatement - after the follow-up if needed
The technician also mentioned NIGHTWATCH BED BUG MONITOR
Here is how this monitor works
Plugs into a wall
$500/piece -
Time will tell how good it is
Here are some other bed bug monitoring units
NightWatch by BioSensory, Inc. is the just one of an effective new type of bed bug monitoring devices on the market. Extensively tested and vetted by Purdue University entomologists, it uses heat, CO2 and a pheromone lure to attract, trap and kill bed bugs. It has a small footprint and has a clock timer with an automatic “on” setting and a CO2 cartridge that lasts several days.
• CDC 3000 by Cimex Science is a discrete, portable monitoring and trapping device housed in a briefcase. Mimicking a human body, it lures bugs within a six-foot radius, annihilating them with CO2, making it safe around children and pets. This monitor has a CO2 cartridge that lasts about eight hours.
• Bug Dome by Silvandersson will soon be available from the Swedish company that developed eco-friendly bed bug eliminator Cryonite. Using an attractant to lure bed bugs into replaceable glue traps, it plugs into any wall outlet.
• BB Alert Active by MIDMOS, available in Europe, should reach U.S. markets soon. The small monitor uses replaceable packets of chemical attractant to entice bugs into a glue trap.
A bed bug monitor might be something to consider.
But looks like now of the 850 subscribers to the yahoo group have tried that, as I have no feedback from any.
These monitors are expensive, but no return policy - as they don't want to infest their warehouse. But then if they this monitor working the way it is intended, then they should not fear an infestation?
Warranty - 30 days after the inital treatment
Targeted treatement - after the follow-up if needed
The technician also mentioned NIGHTWATCH BED BUG MONITOR
Here is how this monitor works
Plugs into a wall
$500/piece -
Time will tell how good it is
Here are some other bed bug monitoring units
NightWatch by BioSensory, Inc. is the just one of an effective new type of bed bug monitoring devices on the market. Extensively tested and vetted by Purdue University entomologists, it uses heat, CO2 and a pheromone lure to attract, trap and kill bed bugs. It has a small footprint and has a clock timer with an automatic “on” setting and a CO2 cartridge that lasts several days.
• CDC 3000 by Cimex Science is a discrete, portable monitoring and trapping device housed in a briefcase. Mimicking a human body, it lures bugs within a six-foot radius, annihilating them with CO2, making it safe around children and pets. This monitor has a CO2 cartridge that lasts about eight hours.
• Bug Dome by Silvandersson will soon be available from the Swedish company that developed eco-friendly bed bug eliminator Cryonite. Using an attractant to lure bed bugs into replaceable glue traps, it plugs into any wall outlet.
• BB Alert Active by MIDMOS, available in Europe, should reach U.S. markets soon. The small monitor uses replaceable packets of chemical attractant to entice bugs into a glue trap.
A bed bug monitor might be something to consider.
But looks like now of the 850 subscribers to the yahoo group have tried that, as I have no feedback from any.
These monitors are expensive, but no return policy - as they don't want to infest their warehouse. But then if they this monitor working the way it is intended, then they should not fear an infestation?
The bed bugs are invading California.
THe PCO I am considering bringing in also does thermal - and it might be worth it to go through that. But, seeing the rampant spread of these bugs, *very* good possibility they will come back.I am tracking the geographies that are hitting my blog and it seems like right now it is Europe, Canada and the US. THis is become a major challenge that will infest every nook and corner including big cities like Vancouver, San Francisco, Toroton, New York etc.
San Francisco was first hit. And visitors to SF have carried it to every nook and corner of CA and beyond. The State Government needs to get cracking on this otherwisethis will be one heck of an issue in less than 6 months. The big guns need to bedrawn and act fast.I am in the San Jose area and have had bugs for at least a year - onlydiscovered last week and it was nasty. I am tracking the geographical hits to myday to day account and steps take in my blog and seemingly every nook and cornerof the world is going through it. Forget swine flue - this is the real deal. We need to get our arms around these buggers (not literally)
Just called the San Francisco Fisherman's Wharf Hostel where I had stayed in December 2008. Pretty good chances I got the bugs from there. Operator said yes, they have had bed bugs problem off and on for the last few years.
September 17, 2009
Bed Buggers make you a pariah!
I sorta alluded to this in my previous postings.
But becoming a social outcast prevents us from fessing up to an infestation.
Thus, we spread these bed bugs who conveniently find new gullible prey.
We inadvertently pass it on to others and these buggers spread
http://news.google.com/news/search?aq=f&pz=1&ned=us&hl=en&q=%22bed+bugs%22
Check this out - the bed bugs have infested Clinton's office, the UNO,
Cruise ship infestation - read on
Juries and judges have been siding with bed bug victims when cases go to court. In the 2003 landmark case (Matthias v. Accor Economy Lodging), Toronto siblings received a jury award of $382,000 against Motel 6 after sharing a room with bed bugs. In 2006, a Chicago couple sued a Catskills resort for $20 million, claiming more than 500 bed bug bites left them physically and mentally scarred. “I was miserable,” plaintiff Leslie Fox told the Associated Press. “My skin felt as if it was on fire and I wanted to tear it off.” In 2007, New York opera star Allison Trainer sued the Hilton hotel chain for $6 million after suffering more than 100 bed bug bites at a Hilton Suites in Phoenix. “They were all over the bed and the comforter and the pillows, and I pulled the sheets off and they were just everywhere,” she told ABC News. In 2008, a guest at San Francisco’s Ramada Plaza Hotel received a $71,000 out-of-court settlement, the largest to date, after 400 bed bug bites left her with a disfiguring skin condition.
But becoming a social outcast prevents us from fessing up to an infestation.
Thus, we spread these bed bugs who conveniently find new gullible prey.
We inadvertently pass it on to others and these buggers spread
http://news.google.com/news/search?aq=f&pz=1&ned=us&hl=en&q=%22bed+bugs%22
Check this out - the bed bugs have infested Clinton's office, the UNO,
Cruise ship infestation - read on
Juries and judges have been siding with bed bug victims when cases go to court. In the 2003 landmark case (Matthias v. Accor Economy Lodging), Toronto siblings received a jury award of $382,000 against Motel 6 after sharing a room with bed bugs. In 2006, a Chicago couple sued a Catskills resort for $20 million, claiming more than 500 bed bug bites left them physically and mentally scarred. “I was miserable,” plaintiff Leslie Fox told the Associated Press. “My skin felt as if it was on fire and I wanted to tear it off.” In 2007, New York opera star Allison Trainer sued the Hilton hotel chain for $6 million after suffering more than 100 bed bug bites at a Hilton Suites in Phoenix. “They were all over the bed and the comforter and the pillows, and I pulled the sheets off and they were just everywhere,” she told ABC News. In 2008, a guest at San Francisco’s Ramada Plaza Hotel received a $71,000 out-of-court settlement, the largest to date, after 400 bed bug bites left her with a disfiguring skin condition.
September 16, 2009
Day 11 - It is eerily quiet
Haven't seen these buggers in some time now.
An itch here a scratch there and I am jumping up to see if I can find one.
This is pathetic!
I have the maids coming over Friday and we plan to use Murphy's oil soap to clean the hardwood floor, clean the tracks of the sliding doors, but leave the Chinchilla dust. Somehow treat the rest of the home. There are no dead bugs by the chincilla dust and I am not sure if it is working. Pestec in San Francisco has K9 units Latte or Ladybug and perhaps it is worthwhile to invite them.
As I lie in bed, any need to scratch gets my mind racing .....thinking about these bed bugs. This is not a good way to live.
But at least no new bed bug bites. But the paranoia continues!
An itch here a scratch there and I am jumping up to see if I can find one.
This is pathetic!
I have the maids coming over Friday and we plan to use Murphy's oil soap to clean the hardwood floor, clean the tracks of the sliding doors, but leave the Chinchilla dust. Somehow treat the rest of the home. There are no dead bugs by the chincilla dust and I am not sure if it is working. Pestec in San Francisco has K9 units Latte or Ladybug and perhaps it is worthwhile to invite them.
As I lie in bed, any need to scratch gets my mind racing .....thinking about these bed bugs. This is not a good way to live.
But at least no new bed bug bites. But the paranoia continues!
September 15, 2009
Day 10 - Did some more research - stuff that I need to try

In my previous email, I have tried to list out all the things we did. All I can say is, we are not getting these parasites biting us in the night, not that we have gotten this in total control yet. That might be a good start.
We are clearing up clutter, thrown away a bunch of stuff - and trying to be very systemic in going about. Based on the horror stories I have read, we have not seen the end of these bugs....all we can do is to be pro-active and instead of a feeling of hopelessness, try to go with a killer attitude and hopefully we can end up victorious (I know, easy to say, hard to do).
But I remember the agitated state of mind we were in when we first discovered
it, but we are feeling more in control after making a little progress. If we outsource this to a PCO, we will never know how to deal with this, and given the state of the world, these buggers have made a huge come back and it is definitely not the last we will see of them in the next few years. Might as well learn to deal with them and figure out for ourselves what works and what does not work. I was very tempted to throw $$ at these over zealous PCOs, but I was hesitant because they don't offer any warranty for their work and secondly, was not sure how harmful the chemicals they use will turn out to be. After all the PCOs are not living in my home, but I will have to bear the long term consequences of whatever they apply inside my bedrooms.
Thus, empowering myself to take responsibility and act was the only way out.
OTHER THOUGHTS and suggestions.
- Do not every buy used furniture or mattresses.
- If you are coming back from a vacation - laundry everything. Vacuum the suitcase.
- Be wary - very wary. Inspect bedding at hotels before you sleep. keep your suitcase on a hard surface, like a table, to avoid infestation. Do not unpack.
- Any area of the house where you spend significant time at - get that area inspected minutely. They are known to sit inside the computers you use. Guerilla warfare at its finest.
- Getting a gecko as a pet? May not work very well.
- Try to increase your room temperature to 120 degrees or open up the windows (if you live in winter land) to let these bugs freeze their butts. This is difficult unless you rope in the professionals.
- Bounce on your beds to dislodge them. They are slow moving and will take all night to come back up. Will work only in a hotel room if you don't have other choices. Worth a try.
- Bed bug bombs don't seem to work. The bed bugs have this weird survival instinct and will scatter at the first sign of trouble. They will come back very angry - be very careful.
- Get an iron bed. Bed bugs can climb shiny surfaces where they can get even the slightest grip.
- Visiting bookstore or coffee shop with those inviting padded chairs - choose a plastic one.
- Purchase an oil burner. Bed bugs can't stand the smell of the burning oil, but for humans it's very easy to select a scent you find pleasant.
- Paint furniture with turpentine - this is very drastic. Or use kerosene.
- Try them all - steaming, spraying Rest Easy, sprinkling of food grade diatomaceous earth, spackling, laundry, black sealed garbage bags in the sun
- Throw away your wooden frame / bed. Wrap them up before you drag them out otherwise you are spreading infestation. Or spray them prior to dragging the furniture. Do not leave them curbside otherwise you are giving this trouble to someone else and that is bad karma.
- There are a few sprays available that seem to work and are non-toxic like BedBug Terminator by Kleen-Free.
- Purchase BT and spray - Many of the transgenic crops being planted in American corn and cotton fields are supposed to give plants do-it-yourself resistance to insects. This trick is done by inserting a gene that makes a protein that injures the gut of chewing insects. The protein, normally made by a soil bacterium called Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt, does not affect mammals, fish, or the beneficial insects that eat crop pests. The many advantages of Bt's crystalline proteins have made the material a mainstay of organic agriculture and the largest-selling biological insect control. Supposed to work well with bed bugs. Give it a try.
- Select furniture and headboards that have very few cracks and crevices for bedbugs to hide.
- Run a bead of caulk around the wall plates, and plug each one with a child safety outlet cover, just in case.
- Keep a LINT-REMOVER. Set a daily alarm for 2am and you would be able to catch them with the lint remover.
- Cryonite spray is the new thing - low temperature CO2 to freeze the heck out of these bugs
-Tip to know if you have bed bugs: check the corner of your fitted sheets. If there are bed bugs you will see small red stains/ pale red/ in the corner.
-bedbugs CANNOT crawl up smooth surfaces like glass or stainless steel, so major appliances are an obstacle to them, walls and furniture ARE NOT. Another obstacle to them is petroleum jelly (one of Pronto's ingredients is a petroleum product). Smearing the legs of tables and chairs with petrolatum creates a
barrier which they don't like and have difficulty crossing. Buggers are repuled by petroleum jelly.
- Sevin. That stuff will kill anything and did. Is it toxic…..yeah. use it carefully or not use it at all.
- Vacuum everything, inside and out, wash all the bedding, then spread diatomaceous earth at floorboards, under the bed, and between the mattress and the box spring. DE is not exactly non toxic and DO NOT INHALE.
- A tablespoon of tea tree oil in a pint-sized spray bottle of water works wonders! And it's a non-toxic, safe solution.
- The best remedy is a great attention to detail (bedbugger.com has lots of good advice. No cutting corners, only you will pay
- Put on clean linens with pale colors such as grey, blue, green, yellow (so you can see blood or other stains more easily).
-If you have a wood bed frame and throwing is not an option, take it completely apart, if you can, and wash it down (every inch) with Murphy's Oil Soap. Spray the Murphy's on and wipe it off.
Don't just spray it on a rag and wipe. The Murphy's will kill bed bugs on contact, if you douse them. I don't know what a light spray will do.
-Captain's beds (with drawers underneath a wooden platform) can be a bed bug nightmare. Consider destroying and carefully removing them. Otherwise, every piece will need to be disassembled, cleaned and sprayed with pesticide (by a PCO). A PCO who knows bed bugs will be able to advise about which items you should discard and which can be treated successfully.
This was news in San Francisco over a year ago. As per SF Chronicle - laundromats were being besieged by people bringing in large amounts of bed linens to be dried (not washed - only dried).
This is a great link below - read through the 198 comments. It is certainly a major threat - they have made a *huuuuge* comeback after a few decades - we will eradicate it completely this time around.
http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/23/bedbugs-itch-itch-scratch-scra
tch/?apage=1
Check out how many recent news items have cropped up recently
http://news.google.com/news/search?aq=f&pz=1&ned=us&hl=en&q=%22bed+bugs%22
Interesting research at Ohio State
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/06/090602133555.htm
NY State IPM's bed bug site:
http://www.nysipm.cornell.edu/whats_bugging_you/bed_bugs/default.asp
Test whether your skin lesions are due to bedbugs as opposed to other bites or human infestations such as scabies. A good reference for the appearance of the bedbug lesions on the skin can be found at:
http://www.visualdxhealth.com/adult/bedbugBite.htm
- bedbugger.com and read FAQs.
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/bedbugger/
http://blogafornia.blogspot.com/
Link
here a few links to some products worth considering
http://stores.shop.ebay.com/Earthworkshealth__W0QQ_armrsZ1
http://allersac.com/
http://www.bugzip.com/
http://www.beyondbeds.com/index.asp?PageAction=Custom&ID=138
http://www.petsmart.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2753568&utm_source=googlepro
duct&utm_campaign=2753568&utm_medium=cse&mr:trackingCode=80CC2C64-C881-DE11-B712
-001422107090&mr:referralID=NA
Labels:
bed bugs,
eradication,
extermination,
FAQ,
how to get rid,
how to kill,
treatment
Day 6 - Changed bed sheets
Discovered a bug floating around on one of the beds.
Good idea changing the covers.
I live in a single family dwelling. We are still fighting the battle, what
has really helped is having hardwood and not carpet. We are no longer getting
bitten in the night, but I am sure these buggers are hidden in the crevices,
cracks etc and we have not seen the last of them. Unfortunately, it takes only
two to create an army in as short as a few weeks.
I think we can do a lot more - as we have barely cracked the surface of things to do.
If these bugs have hitch hiked and created their base in other rooms - which I
am sure is the case - that will make it more challenging. We have just focused
upon the bedrooms, but perhaps we need to go with an all out
on slaught, but that impacts our social life and we are sorta hesitant about it.
Good idea changing the covers.
I live in a single family dwelling. We are still fighting the battle, what
has really helped is having hardwood and not carpet. We are no longer getting
bitten in the night, but I am sure these buggers are hidden in the crevices,
cracks etc and we have not seen the last of them. Unfortunately, it takes only
two to create an army in as short as a few weeks.
I think we can do a lot more - as we have barely cracked the surface of things to do.
If these bugs have hitch hiked and created their base in other rooms - which I
am sure is the case - that will make it more challenging. We have just focused
upon the bedrooms, but perhaps we need to go with an all out
on slaught, but that impacts our social life and we are sorta hesitant about it.
Day 3 - Depression gives way to Determination

Some measures I adopted and would recommend.
- Put bed bug protector covers onto the mattresses and pillows (Bed Bath and
Beyond). They will suffocate inside your mattress and die.
- Get Chinchilla dust bath from http://stores.petsmart.com/index.php
dust your home below the base board and other hiding spots. Put it around the
perimeter of your bed. It sucks the moisture from the bed bug and they will
eventually die. Use a mustard jar - fill it with this dust and spray it around.
Open the wall sockets and spray it inside (between two walls - where they are
typically hiding). It's made of diatomaceous earth- non toxic - and it kills
anything with an exoskeleton, roaches, fleas, bedbugs, yellowjacks, you name it.
You can buy it at a pet store. Sprinkle it or puff it with condiment squeeze
bottle or something similar, work it in with a wisk broom, vacuum the excess and
you've nailed them. Don't hire an expensive pest control firm that will spray
toxic chemicals.
- Put a double sided tape around the legs of your bed
- There is a chain of thought about steam cleaning - but it only works if the
steam comes in contact with the bed bugs. They are hidden deep inside your
mattress.and will be hard to reach.
- Purchase EQUATE or RID bedding spray from Walmart (near pharmacy section) and
spray any area you suspect of hosting bed bugs.
- This is a good time to go on a cleaning binge - clean your home up real good.
Reduce clutter and become a minimalist.
- Pull the furniture away from the walls - you should be able to see the edges.
Pull the bed away from the wall and any wall hangings.
- Focus on the rooms where folks sleep - that is where the bed bugs converge
- If you have carpet, think about getting hard wood. Will make it easier to get
rid of the bed bugs. We got lucky, had put in hard wood a few years ago.
- Laundry your bed sheets every week. Take the comforter to a commercial dryer /
dry cleaner.
- Before getting into your night clothes run them into the microwave or dryer (@
hot) - we have not been too good with this.
- Spray medicated baby talcum powder underneath your bed sheets - functions like
the Chinchila dust
- Run your laundry cycle at hot only - dryer at hot only
- In my mind it is not worthwhile to pay pest control. They will come in and
play the fear card - just stay firm. Invite them to learn and see what they have
to offer. But the destiny of these bug s lie in your hand. Play your cards well
- be meticulous and read up. THey are hard to get rid off and giving a PCO $3000
is not the cure. You just play it smart and do the right things you have a
pretty good chance of getting rid of them. It takes a good mixture of
dedication, obsession, and some good natural products to exterminate these
things, but it can be done. So do not give up hope.
- If you have tell tale marks on your body, cover them with band-aid and see if
new ones crop up. If new ones crop up, the bed bugs are still int your bed.
- We did throw away some furniture - but it was time to get some new ones
anyway.

Think of all the good things that life has offered you and continues to offer
you. Be happy - that bed bugs are the least of your problems - could be a lot worse.
Stay positive.
Labels:
bed bugs,
eradication,
extermination,
FAQ,
how to get rid,
how to kill,
treatment
Day 2 - PCOs

I have also been reading a lot. As is typical with a project - invited the experts.
The PCOs streamed in and out. I could sense a bit of fear in their eyes, they wanted to make sure they don't take the bugs along with them.
They sensed the fear in me as well and came up with arbitrary numbers. One of them wanted to tent the house ($3000)...too expensive. I asked him pointedly how does the 3x gases work with the eggs. He stumbled and mumbled something. One of them wanted to use cryonite and spray all over the house at likely hiding places. ..may not work . They offered a warranty of 90 days, better than most other folks. Another wanted to just spray the bedrooms. This last guy discussed the issue in some detail (and didn't come in and get out in a hurry) and I learnt something. Started getting comfortable of doing it myself. These guys were planning to spray some nasty chemicals ...God knows what and I mentally decided not to invite them in.
Many of them acted like Bush and Cheney - play the doom and gloom card, raise the terror alert flag and make hay while the sun shines. The $$$ were shining in their eyes. They made no attempt to provide some assurance at all - probably because they know it is a hopeless battle. There was only one guy who spent some time with me walking through and answering my questions.
They just didn't invest enough to try to solve my problem...too bad! Perhaps they were in a hurry to run to the next appointment.
I realized I had enough data points to try and do it myself.
Stuff that plays in my favor - living in a single family home and hardwood floors.
Day 1 - The Bed Bugs Strike
God know how I got them inside my home.
But these buggers were discovered on two separate bedrooms on September 6th.
I was absolutely horrified!
For a long time I thought they were mosquito bites.
But, this particular bed was teeming with these rascals.
DId a quick bed check, and we found another infected bed.
I promptly threw the beds and mattresses in the backyard. These bugs were crawling all over my lawn. Sprayed them with RID that I got from Walmart. Thought the sun would kill them, but on further research they wilt under scorching heat or freezing weather. The furniture was all gone. Two of the twin mattresses lay in the sun for the next 4 - 5 days.
Not a good Sunday I must say. My research just begun...lots of reading.
Gives me the heebie jeebies to go back to the scene of them crawling over the bed. To imagine that they had an unaware host for almost a year.
Darn, these suckers deserve to be nuked!
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