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All You Need To Know About Bed Bugs

Bed Bugs Vacuum Cleaner

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments
Rexair
Bed Bugs Vacuum Cleaner

Bed bus infestations have been a problem since time immemorial.

A known enemy of those wanting a good nights sleep, bed bugs make sure that they leave a mark when they attack.

Various solutions have been tried and tested over the years but bed bugs have remained resilient and have continued in their disturbing ways. Given their name these insects normally dwell in the inner portion of a bed where the temperature is perfect for them.

Bed bugs normally lay eggs in the tears and holes of a bed.

Beds that are heavily infested or already in poor condition are prime candidates for disposal, as salvaging these is just a waste of time.

Eradicating bed bugs is a difficult task and it is not advisable for a person to solely treat an infestation.

Keeping surroundings clean by using a vacuum is very helpful in removing eggs. Adult bedbugs can live for as long as a year without eating and therefore could survive even in an abandoned property.

A pest issue

Bed bugs actually become an issue when they start to hunt for food, particularly blood.

Bed bugs normally stay in their homes if they are not starving.

Bed bug bites appear as large wheals in the affected part of the body. The wheals turn into red marks that can stay for as long as three days depending on how the wound is treated. The wheals appear in an orderly manner unlike the random patter of mosquito bites. The affected area should never be scratched to avoid infections.

Any part of the body that has good blood flow is a target of bed bugs so dont be surprised if they bite the most sensitive areas.

Fight the good fight with a Rainbow vacuum cleaner

While constantly cleaning a room is one way to prevent bed bug infestations using broom, dustpan and cloth will unlikely be enough. One of the most popular and effective methods to get rid of bed bugs is by using a vacuum cleaner. The Rainbow vacuum cleaning system from Rexair LLC is among the worlds leaders in vacuum technology.

The Rainbow was designed based on the concept of using a bagless vacuum cleaner. The forerunner of the Rainbow vacuum was a device called the separator, which was designed to separate dust from air. The concept was developed John W. Newcombe and after partnering with Leslie H Green the two came up with the Newcombe Bagless.

The first official Rainbow vacuum was introduced in 1955 and it served as the upgraded version of the Rexair vacuum.

The Rainbow had a sleeker design and a more powerful engine. The popularity of the Rainbow became stronger after Sanders and Associates acquired Rexair. From then on, the Rainbow vacuum reached more dealerships across the US and eventually resulted in increased earnings for the company.

Today Rexair is a globally renowned brand with production facilities in Mexico, Cuba and Canada.

The current flagship product of Rexair is the e Series e2 released in 2004. The e2 is touted as having unmatched cleaning capabilities.

After using a Rainbow vacuum cleaner to clean the dwellings of bed bugs, the bag should be placed in a larger plastic bag and sealed tightly.

The bag should be discarded in an outdoor container to prevent the bugs from re-entering the home. Disposing the mattress altogether is another option, but a new mattress might immediately become infested if beg bugs are still in the area.

Vacuuming alone will not solve bed bug infestations, but it can considerably reduce the population of the insects as part of a major pest treatment.

A crevice attachment should be placed on box springs, behind pictures, curtains, inside furniture interiors, mattress seams and anywhere that can be used by insects as a hiding place. Other parts that need to be vacuumed include carpets and baseboards. The filter should be immediately removed and discarded after use.

The Rainbow vacuum cleaner has been constantly immitated but never duplicated by its rivals. Behind the Rainbow vacuum cleaner is 70 years worth of product development and constant ingenuity and improvement. It is advisable that a Rainbow should only be purchased from an unauthorized distributor.

Bed bugs beware, the Rainbow is here.

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Bed Bugs On Television

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments
Inspecting for Bedbugs
Looking for bedbugs

The television is in constant search for shows that feature interesting subjects. TV is almost always all about the ratings.

That is why even the most bizarre subjects are featured nowadays in various TV shows. Yes, TV stardom has expanded from the Hollywood stars now down to even the silliest creatures.

There are several TV shows, most of them animated that star or feature bed bugs. Just like movies like Antz and others that feature bugs, mites, ants and other insects, TV producers and managers have recognized the star power of bed bugs.

And why are bed bugs so popular that people will get to watch their TV shows? One factor is that they are, in real life, so annoying.

Bed bugs do not carry nor transmit diseases but they bite and cause skin irritation. What more, they rapidly multiply and produce off spring. That is why people would love to ridicule and laugh at them through TV shows.

What a desperate form of vengeance, huh?

To know more about bed bugs and differentiate them from the funny and cuddly image projected on the TV, it would be better to know more about them.

Bed bugs, the side not projected on TV

Bed bugs are among the millions of species of insects in existence. Scientifically, bed bugs are labelled as Cimex lectularius.

Experts and professionals do claim that bed bugs had been controlled successfully in the United States in the period of the 70s and 80s. However, due to persistence and survival of bed bugs in Asia, Europe and Africa, travelers may have carried the parasites during travel and migration to the country.

Bed bugs are wingless, tiny insects. They are indeed parasites that feed primarily on blood of warm-blooded hosts or victims like animals and human. The notion that bed bugs only bite humans is totally wrong. Your pets can also be host to the parasite.

Dogs, cats, birds in short, every mammal that come into contact or near the infested bed, surroundings or area can be affected by bed bugs.

Bed bugs are so small, that you can hardly see them. Biggest bed bugs, however, during their final stage of life and maturity can be as big and large as about on fourth an inch in length. Usually, bed bugs are also oval-shaped and they may appear flattened when viewed from top down to bottom.

Bed bugs are, most of the time, colored deep brown or cream to white. There are also bed bugs that appear burnt orange in color, juts like ants.

Boring TV stuff

However, not all TV shows involving bed bugs are animated and humanized features. Channels like the National Geographic channel and other informative TV networks do feature shows that are somehow documentaries.

These types of TV shows not only show actual enlarged footages of bed bugs and their activities. They show ways to curtail them.

Thus, such TV shows proliferate because more and more people get to relate to the subject. More and more people are affected and annoyed by the existence of bed bugs.

TV shows like these are very educational. They will advise you how to manage bed bugs infestation in your place or area.

But such TV shows dont normally garner good TV ratings. Many people do watch them, but as soon as problems arising from bed bugs go away, their patronization of such TV shows also vanish.

Indeed, TV has become the window to the world. Through various TV shows, you will get to a lot of subjects and be to many places around the globe. You can be in New York this hour and be in Paris the next hour, without leaving your living room.

That is how wonderful TV has become.

But why do you have to settle for such TV shows? Why go to many places outside when you have to know the occurrences in your own house.

There are scenes that happen in your bedroom that you do not get to see. But they can be featured in documentary TV shows that describe infestation of bed bugs.

These TV shows deserve a much-needed break ands should be given more budget and attention by TV managers and executives to make them more interesting.

Tune in to the TV channel that feature lots of facts about bed bugs and experience them for yourself.

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Do You Have Bed Bugs?

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments
A pillowtop mattress (U.S.
Image via Wikipedia

Bed bugs are everywhere, although they have been nearly exterminated during the 1950’s and 1960’s because of the widespread use of DDT. Bed bugs are coming back and it seems nothing can stop them since the banning of DDT.

You may say that you regularly clean your household and there is no way that bed bugs could possibly invade your home. Wrong. Having bed bugs at home does not mean that your home is filthy. Both clean and unclean house can be infested with bed bugs. So, how would you know if you have bed bugs?

Many people do not know if they have bed bugs. They don’t even know what bed bugs look like. Unlike cockroaches that flies and walks shamelessly, bed bugs are ’shy’ insects. They crawl out from their hiding only when you are asleep at night. Bed bugs will crawl back from its home once you move from your position.

Before you stress yourself in knowing how to kill bed bugs by yourself, try to answer first the basic question of how to know if you have bed bugs. After that, it’s killing time.

– How to know if you have bed bugs – Fact 1:

Know thy bug.

Would you know if it is a bed bug if you see one? Of course, the answer is no. Few people these days have seen a crawling bed bug unless he is living in a bed bug infested house. Even in hotels and motels, the bed bugs haven, you won’t see one crawling at your bed towards your shoulders. As mentioned earlier, bed bugs are shy. And it won’t go after you to withdraw blood from your skin even if it is hungry if you are moving.

** Description of bed bugs

Bed bugs can be seen by the naked eye. Forget what your grandfather had told you that they are so small that no person can actually see them. The only reason why only a few people can see bed bugs is that bed bugs are nocturnal insects and can rarely be seen walking in daylight. They are as small as appleseeds (which means they can be seen), reddish brown in color, oval shaped, flat and wingless. The distinctive characteristic of bed bugs is its oval-flat shape. Most bugs are rounded at the top.

– How to know if you have bed bugs – Fact 2:

Know how they behave.

Bed bugs are nocturnals. They feed during the night, and are most active when dawn breaks.

Bed bugs have this offensive, sweet-like, musty scent. You can smell this odor in a room or area that has bed bugs infestation. This is one of the best answers to question how to know if you have bed bugs.

Bed bugs want to be near to their hosts. So, to know if you have bed bugs, check out the area where people usually stays. The bedroom, living room, and sometimes the dining room are the usual hiding places of bed bugs.

– How to know if you have bed bugs – Fact 3:

Catch them if you can.

** So the first thing to do if you suspected that the place have bed bugs, check the undercover of your mattress and edge lining under your bed. You would know that you have bed bugs if you will see reddish brown stains on these area and some shed insect skins. The reddish brown stain is bed bugs dried excrement.

If a female bed bug had lain eggs, you will see some white nymphs there. There is no need to ask how to know if you have bed bugs if you see excrement stains and shed skins.

** To know if you have bed bugs and you want to catch them, try to wake up in the middle of the night. Try to be still, though it is okay to breathe.

If you have bed bugs infestation you will see one or two bed bugs crawling towards you.

Try to move a bit, and you will see that a bed bug will back away. After that, keep still. It will move back to you.

Then try to move again without killing it. It will go back to its hiding place.

There, you got your bed bug.

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How Do I Get Rid of Bed Bugs?

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments
Cimex pilosellus
Image via Wikipedia

Getting rid of bed bugs can be a tiring and tedious task. Because bed bugs are really annoying, people who live with bed bugs in their homes, desperately find and adopt measures to eliminate bed bugs.

So the question is persistent, just like their subjects—bed bugs. So how do you get rid of bed bugs?

The easy step

The easiest step would also fall to be the most stupid. This means will only require your utmost patience and perseverance.

You will have to look out and capture bed bugs when they come out of their habitats. That would mean, you will have to stay up all night because bed bugs usually come out and hunt food in the wee hours of the night. That is the time they feel their hosts will be more vulnerable.

Bed bugs can be pretty smart. But their smart behaviors are only products of their desire to survive. They come out of night because they can be sensitive to light. Instincts are instilled at them that light means danger.

Surely, during daytime, their exposure would only give them more risks. It is because however tiny they are, they can still be spotted in broad daylight.

So the easiest step would be to look out and capture bed bugs, one by one. After capturing them, squash them so they will not survive. Pretty gross. But hey, bed bugs are so tiny, blood and viscera squirming out of their tiny bodies will tend to be unnoticeable.

The dangerous way

If there is an easy yet stupid way, there is the efficient, yet sure and deadly way to get rid of bed bugs. This is through using insecticides or pesticides.

There are three groups of pesticides available in the market for the sole purpose of exterminating unwanted bed bugs. Look at them closely.

One, pesticides can be in the form of insecticidal dusts. These group of pesticides are characterized by the existence or presence of ground or pulverized glass and silica powder. Hence, they are dust.

The dust attacks bed bugs by destroying their outermost waxy protective coats. These coats are like coating that make up the skin of bed bugs. They serve as helmets.

Insecticidal dusts have chemicals with them. Once the bed bugs protective coats are ruined, the chemicals will set in and poison or dry out the bed bugs systems.

Second, there are contact insecticides. Contact insecticides are pesticides that should be applied to infested areas or surfaces. You will find that this group is very effective in getting rid of bed bugs.

But they also pose downsides. For one, contact insecticides are repellant in nature. Meaning, they stink so effectively to the insects senses, that they can easily sense presence of insecticides.

That characteristic of contact insecticides makes it less effective. Since it is repellant, it is not sure and guaranteed that bed bugs will be gotten rid of. They simply may avoid contact with applied surfaces. Hence, they will try to find another more conducive habitat.

Third and last group will be the insect growth regulators. This group is aimed at getting rid of bed bugs while they still are in early stages.

IGRs will attack or poison young bed bugs, or their eggs. By doing that, it is guaranty that no new generation will spurt out. The only problem and mess the complainant will have to deal with are the adult bed bugs.

Use of IGRs as pesticides can be effective, yet so much time and patience is required. As the saying goes, this measure is slowly but surely.

The most effective and safest way

If you are smart and practical at the same time, you will resort to seeking professional help as you aim to finally get rid of bed bugs.

Pest control experts and companies are overflowing in your locality, just lie how bed bugs population is overflowing in your bed and room.

Pest control experts know what to do to get rid of bed bugs effectively. They are more familiar to the proper chemicals and pesticides. That is why risks of poisoning yourself and your house mates can be ruled out.

Getting rid of bed bugs can be easy, if you only know how to. The safest and most effective way is to contact pest exterminators, and pronto! You can get rid of your unlikely bed mates.

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How To Exterminate Bed Bugs

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments
DDT
Image via Wikipedia

Bed bugs are tiny little creature that suck blood off their human prey. Often dismissed as a nuisance, bed bugs are now a serious problem both at home, in the offices and luxury establishments.

Why the infestation? There are two reasons for the increase in the number of bed bugs found in homes and other establishments recently. One of them is the increase in the number travelers and immigrants who stay in motels and unknowingly bring these insects along with them back home.

The second reason is the possibility that bed bugs have now become immune to the pesticides being used. It was in the 1940s and 1950s that the exterminating of bed bugs began. An insecticide called DDT was used and was highly effective in killing the bed bugs population.

However, the exterminating of bed bugs was discontinued when the DDT was banned in the 1960s for its harmful effect to the environment. Since then the bugs have been waiting patiently to return to our homes.

Wholesale spraying of beds, walls, floors, furniture, etc. with DDT was the solution in exterminating bed bugs. However, law does not permit this kind of remedy anymore. Exterminating bed bugs now require the more thoroughness as bed bugs become cleverer.

Bed bugs hide in the cracks of furniture, in the mattresses, throw pillow, beneath the sofa and everywhere else you can think of. This is why exterminating of bed bugs is tedious work. All the possible places for the bed bugs to live in are searched and turned over before beginning the actual process of exterminating of bed bugs. This is to ensure that there will be no more bed bugs left once the treatment is complete.

It is wise not to do the exterminating of bed bugs on your own. You may end up harming yourself rather than taking the problem away. But you can do the following to help in the exterminating of bed bugs:

The clothes, bed sheets, line, pillowcases, blankets and the like must be washed before the treatment begins.

Wrap mattresses in a huge black plastic bag then put it under the sun.

Vacuum all the nooks and crannies visible inside the home.

Seal any gaps in the furniture, floorboards and cracks where the bed bugs can hide.

After that, step side and let the professionals start the exterminating of bed bugs in your home.

The process of exterminating of bed bugs continues with the application of insecticide spray on the furniture. There are different types of spray for every kind of equipment like mattresses or carpets. Some of these chemicals for the exterminating of bed bugs are odorless and has leaves little to no residue on the furniture. A professional does the exterminating of bed bugs with the proper protective gear.

Exterminating of bed bugs infestation is tedious work and requires a lot of patience. These pests live in cracks that are difficult to reach with pest control products and can survive months without food. By making sure that all the areas have been sprayed properly, the exterminating of bed bugs will be more effective.

After the exterminating of bed bugs through spraying of insecticides, the next process is to use insecticide dust. This dusting is very important in exterminating of bed bugs because this is what kills the bed bugs. The insecticide dust reaches for those areas that have the spray has left behind.

The entire process of exterminating of bed bugs can last three days to weeks, depending on the infestation. Normally, the exterminating of bed bugs was quicker with the houses being sprayed with DDT. But now the process is more targeted, meaning slower but thorough.

This doesnt mean that the new procedure for exterminating of bed bugs is less effective. The business has changed over the years and now professionals must be considerate of the clients needs for being careful with their possessions.

Homes are not the only ones fighting for the exterminating of bed bugs. Hotels, vintage shops, motels, dormitories and apartments all have a war with exterminating of bed bugs. Maintaining proper hygiene on these properties can great reduce the bed bug infestation. And if push comes to shove, the pest control number is in the yellow pages.

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