this post was submitted on 10 Dec 2023
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I'm not too familiar with bed bugs but I've heard they are a pain to get rid of and tend to catch a ride on suit cases/bags to the next location.
I saw a video ages ago of a guy getting rid of bed bugs and he basically just used some tape and went under every single crease and crevice of the mattress and frame till he got all of them. Looked very laborious.
If it was me I'd run as far as I can. Last thing you want is to take bed bugs back with you.
The insidius thing about bedbugs is that they aren't just in beds. Clothes, people, carpeting, cracks in the wall, baseboards, electric sockets. If there's enough where you can clearly see them along the edges of beds. It's too late, they're already everywhere else.
Also read that they are resistant to insecticides as well. What horrible things they are.
They can go a year without eating.
Their eggs last long too and are nearly invisible.
They can sense CO² from and will travel 100 meters to feed
They will go around barriers and drop on you from the ceiling
Theyd be cool if they didn't suck
Yeah, largely because they don’t have chewing mouthparts (so can’t eat the poison) and don’t lick their feet, so won’t pick it up from there. You have to directly spray a bug to kill it, there’s no residual effect. Diatomaceous Earth works as a residual, as it gets in their joints, cuts them up, and dehydrates them.
There are neurotoxins that are kind of effective, like temprid, but it takes multiple treatments over months to like maybe work
I swear by diatomaceous earth but it only works on things with a hard carapace or body. It does not work well on pests with soft bodies like ticks and bed bugs.
DE works, it dehydrates them. But in my experience it helps to control them, it doesn't knock them out completely