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All You Need To Know About Bed Bugs

Natural Pest Control â?? Good for You and the Environment, Bad for the Bugs

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments

Scientists tell us that we share our planet with more insects and arachnids than all the other inhabitants combined. Scientists will also tell you that we need all those creeping, crawling, flying, six and eight legged beasties for the life and health of the planet and its citizens, including ourselves. Thatâ??s fine with most of us, I suppose, as long as we donâ??t have to share our immediate living space with any of them. Scientists have also told us, though, that many of the chemicals that will rid our homes and offices of ants, spiders, roaches and what not are harmful. They can be dangerous to us, to our pets, and to the environment in general. So how do we rid ourselves and our spaces of the bugs that bug us so much? By harnessing the power of natureâ??s own repellents!

Most of the natural ingredients used in the pest control formulas listed in this article can be found in the grocery store or pharmacy. In fact, you may already have many of them in your home right now. This makes natural pest control easy to implement and easy on your wallet, as well. Thatâ??s something expensive professional exterminators donâ??t want you to know.

Cockroaches

Roaches are the tough guys of the bug world. Supposedly, they can withstand an atomic blast, right? And right now youâ??re thinking youâ??ll never be able to control the nastiest of the nasties with anything natural. Well, look no further than your local pet store. It seems roaches donâ??t like catnip! Thatâ??s right, that little dried weed that gets Fluffy crazy-drunk repels roaches. Simmer some catnip in a pot of water and then cool. Place this â??teaâ? in a spray bottle and spritz along cupboards and floorboards where roaches like to travel. Catnip sachets made with little squares of cheesecloth can be placed on top of the fridge, in between the cabinets and the ceiling and other high places where spritzing can be difficult. Fluffy may just have to get used to the constant high in the kitchen, although other cats have not seemed to notice it in their homes. Of course, the best deterrent for roaches is cleanliness â??before you start spritzing, vacuum the floors and wash down all surfaces with good, hot soapy water. Keeping food and dirty dishes off counters and out of sinks may be your easiest and most natural defense against cockroaches.

Ants

Ants at a picnic are one thing. Ants at a dinner party are another. Ants can be extremely difficult to get rid of because the colony can be quite large – large, hungry and always on the lookout for more food. Again, your best, and first, line of defense is to remove what theyâ??re looking for. Keep open food and dirty dishes off the counters. Wash up any sticky spills and spots. Put the honey, pancake syrup and jelly containers in the fridge or in plastic storage bags â?? the â??zipperedâ? type work best. Eliminate their source of water by stopping all leaks and drips and not leaving any dishes soaking overnight. Now, your next important step in the natural war on ants is to find their point of entry, or the closest point of flat surface to their point of entry. Once youâ??ve discovered where theyâ??re coming in, you have a few choices. Ants donâ??t like cayenne pepper or cloves, so sprinkling a line of either on your counter or floor near their trail should deter them from coming in. A piece of string or yarn can be soaked in citrus oil, cinnamon oil or lemon juice and placed into cracks where ants enter. Line a windowsill or counter top with coffee grounds. Live ants are stopped with a spritz of soapy water. Ants on a deck or porch outdoors can be diverted by placing garlic cloves in between the floorboards. Mint leaves, even herbal mint tea bags, can be placed in areas where ants are known to travel. So, pick one of the above, or try several. Send them scouting elsewhere!

Spiders

Spiders are not only a nuisance, but also a health hazard, as well. Brown recluse bites can cause death, amputation and disfigurement. Black widows have been known to make victims ill, (though no one has died from a black widow bite in the US in the last ten years.) In short, they may keep other insects like flies and moths at bay, but they can be risky to have around. Spiders, by nature, are a bit harder to be rid of, as they like to live in out-of-the-way, hard-to-access places. They take a bit more precaution, too, on your part. Remember to always wear long sleeves, pants and gloves when searching and destroying spider habitats. Spiders like the dark spaces under beds, couches and chairs. They love any little crack in brick or paneled walls. They also love to hide in the cracks between the woodwork and the doors and windows of our homes. If a broom canâ??t reach them, try the vacuum hose with the crevice tool attachment. Spiders like to hide in clutter and clothing thatâ??s been lying about, as well, so itâ??s best to keep things picked up. Spray spiders directly with one of the following essential oils: rose, citronella, lavender, peppermint, cinnamon, tea tree or citrus. Mix 5 tablespoons of any of the above oils with 5 tablespoons natural lavender soap in a quart of water to create a spider repellent spray. This can be used to spray the foundation of your home, around windows and doors, even inside the outside trash bins to keep the pesky eight legged critters out of your space.

Pest control neednâ??t be smelly, dangerous chemicals and high exterminating bills. You can keep your home free of pests and free of environmental dangers, too.

Gone Insect Band offers all natural choices for bug band including the essential oils of peppermint and lavender. Visit us online for an effective and safe way to protect from insects.

Filed under: Bed Bug Bites Leave A Comment »

Natural Pest Control â?? Good for You and the Environment, Bad for the Bugs

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments

Scientists tell us that we share our planet with more insects and arachnids than all the other inhabitants combined. Scientists will also tell you that we need all those creeping, crawling, flying, six and eight legged beasties for the life and health of the planet and its citizens, including ourselves. Thatâ??s fine with most of us, I suppose, as long as we donâ??t have to share our immediate living space with any of them. Scientists have also told us, though, that many of the chemicals that will rid our homes and offices of ants, spiders, roaches and what not are harmful. They can be dangerous to us, to our pets, and to the environment in general. So how do we rid ourselves and our spaces of the bugs that bug us so much? By harnessing the power of natureâ??s own repellents!

Most of the natural ingredients used in the pest control formulas listed in this article can be found in the grocery store or pharmacy. In fact, you may already have many of them in your home right now. This makes natural pest control easy to implement and easy on your wallet, as well. Thatâ??s something expensive professional exterminators donâ??t want you to know.

Cockroaches

Roaches are the tough guys of the bug world. Supposedly, they can withstand an atomic blast, right? And right now youâ??re thinking youâ??ll never be able to control the nastiest of the nasties with anything natural. Well, look no further than your local pet store. It seems roaches donâ??t like catnip! Thatâ??s right, that little dried weed that gets Fluffy crazy-drunk repels roaches. Simmer some catnip in a pot of water and then cool. Place this â??teaâ? in a spray bottle and spritz along cupboards and floorboards where roaches like to travel. Catnip sachets made with little squares of cheesecloth can be placed on top of the fridge, in between the cabinets and the ceiling and other high places where spritzing can be difficult. Fluffy may just have to get used to the constant high in the kitchen, although other cats have not seemed to notice it in their homes. Of course, the best deterrent for roaches is cleanliness â??before you start spritzing, vacuum the floors and wash down all surfaces with good, hot soapy water. Keeping food and dirty dishes off counters and out of sinks may be your easiest and most natural defense against cockroaches.

Ants

Ants at a picnic are one thing. Ants at a dinner party are another. Ants can be extremely difficult to get rid of because the colony can be quite large – large, hungry and always on the lookout for more food. Again, your best, and first, line of defense is to remove what theyâ??re looking for. Keep open food and dirty dishes off the counters. Wash up any sticky spills and spots. Put the honey, pancake syrup and jelly containers in the fridge or in plastic storage bags â?? the â??zipperedâ? type work best. Eliminate their source of water by stopping all leaks and drips and not leaving any dishes soaking overnight. Now, your next important step in the natural war on ants is to find their point of entry, or the closest point of flat surface to their point of entry. Once youâ??ve discovered where theyâ??re coming in, you have a few choices. Ants donâ??t like cayenne pepper or cloves, so sprinkling a line of either on your counter or floor near their trail should deter them from coming in. A piece of string or yarn can be soaked in citrus oil, cinnamon oil or lemon juice and placed into cracks where ants enter. Line a windowsill or counter top with coffee grounds. Live ants are stopped with a spritz of soapy water. Ants on a deck or porch outdoors can be diverted by placing garlic cloves in between the floorboards. Mint leaves, even herbal mint tea bags, can be placed in areas where ants are known to travel. So, pick one of the above, or try several. Send them scouting elsewhere!

Spiders

Spiders are not only a nuisance, but also a health hazard, as well. Brown recluse bites can cause death, amputation and disfigurement. Black widows have been known to make victims ill, (though no one has died from a black widow bite in the US in the last ten years.) In short, they may keep other insects like flies and moths at bay, but they can be risky to have around. Spiders, by nature, are a bit harder to be rid of, as they like to live in out-of-the-way, hard-to-access places. They take a bit more precaution, too, on your part. Remember to always wear long sleeves, pants and gloves when searching and destroying spider habitats. Spiders like the dark spaces under beds, couches and chairs. They love any little crack in brick or paneled walls. They also love to hide in the cracks between the woodwork and the doors and windows of our homes. If a broom canâ??t reach them, try the vacuum hose with the crevice tool attachment. Spiders like to hide in clutter and clothing thatâ??s been lying about, as well, so itâ??s best to keep things picked up. Spray spiders directly with one of the following essential oils: rose, citronella, lavender, peppermint, cinnamon, tea tree or citrus. Mix 5 tablespoons of any of the above oils with 5 tablespoons natural lavender soap in a quart of water to create a spider repellent spray. This can be used to spray the foundation of your home, around windows and doors, even inside the outside trash bins to keep the pesky eight legged critters out of your space.

Pest control neednâ??t be smelly, dangerous chemicals and high exterminating bills. You can keep your home free of pests and free of environmental dangers, too.

Gone Insect Band offers all natural choices for bug band including the essential oils of peppermint and lavender. Visit us online for an effective and safe way to protect from insects.

Filed under: Control of bed bugs Leave A Comment »

Do you Live in a Green Environment or is your Environment Transparent?

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments

People today are becoming more concern about the environment and go green environmental services than the last century. Over the century, our environment has gone from green to transparent. Transparent meaning chemical use more and more taking the natural product and turning it to transparent with so many chemicals a person reading the label would hardly find the natural product.

Today and for years we eat, sleep, breath, walk, drive, work, play, wear, and see with chemicals. As we know, most foods today made with chemicals or made up with chemicals to make the fastest way to prepare food. The cooking equipment we use, to the coffee pot for morning coffee is chemical made.

We sleep on chemical pillows, sheets, blankets, comforters and yes, the pajamas are full of chemicals.

To find out more about good quality bedding for the sleeping and where to purchase the bedding, check out environmental green web directory, and go green environmental services.

Soaps and laundry aids. Use low suds soap and the more organic the better for everyone. Today going to the store and buying a shampoo could be a chore. A whole isle of chemical treatment for washing your hair waits anyone. Using good organic shampoo for hair will not only help the environment in addition, will help keeping your hair healthy. Look for the go green environmental services label on the packages to make sure this is environmental safe.

Start with replacing energy efficiency appliances in the home. Look at the green innovative lighting use light bulbs that give great light still help with efficiency and has the go green environmental services logo. Look at the fixtures in the home, the bathroom, kitchen, laundry area and other rooms. Some of the fixtures are simple to replace and low cost to help with saving for the larger replacement for going green.

Furniture has chemicals in the finishing’s, stains, fabric, and foam. Start with simple improvements with the furniture though out the home. Beds that are made of wood known to hold bugs and diseases replace with metal bed frames. Metal bed frames will not let bugs and diseases in bed in the metal. Metal is also easier to keep clean. Mattresses that have chemicals, that are unhealthy replace with good cotton filled and spring mattress. Some of the mattress for going green is fire resistant and stain resistant. Look for the go green environmental services logo before purchasing the mattress.

Are you thinking about remodeling a room, home perhaps thinking about building a new home? Construction companies are becoming more aware of the going green environment using products for energy efficiency and fewer chemicals to build a home.

Searching the internet is a good place to find tips and suggestions on how you today can start with turning your transparent environment back to green. Go green environmental Forum & Articles and environmental green web directory can help you get started today.

Environmental green web directory has sites that can help anyone to start to become green. The directory offers sites for go green environmental services, shopping services and Go green environmental Forum & Articles to help with the green products and green innovative lighting . Visit the go green directory to start the transparent back to green.

Filed under: Treatment Leave A Comment »

Natural Pest Control â?? Good for You and the Environment, Bad for the Bugs

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments

Scientists tell us that we share our planet with more insects and arachnids than all the other inhabitants combined. Scientists will also tell you that we need all those creeping, crawling, flying, six and eight legged beasties for the life and health of the planet and its citizens, including ourselves. Thatâ??s fine with most of us, I suppose, as long as we donâ??t have to share our immediate living space with any of them. Scientists have also told us, though, that many of the chemicals that will rid our homes and offices of ants, spiders, roaches and what not are harmful. They can be dangerous to us, to our pets, and to the environment in general. So how do we rid ourselves and our spaces of the bugs that bug us so much? By harnessing the power of natureâ??s own repellents!

Most of the natural ingredients used in the pest control formulas listed in this article can be found in the grocery store or pharmacy. In fact, you may already have many of them in your home right now. This makes natural pest control easy to implement and easy on your wallet, as well. Thatâ??s something expensive professional exterminators donâ??t want you to know.

Cockroaches

Roaches are the tough guys of the bug world. Supposedly, they can withstand an atomic blast, right? And right now youâ??re thinking youâ??ll never be able to control the nastiest of the nasties with anything natural. Well, look no further than your local pet store. It seems roaches donâ??t like catnip! Thatâ??s right, that little dried weed that gets Fluffy crazy-drunk repels roaches. Simmer some catnip in a pot of water and then cool. Place this â??teaâ? in a spray bottle and spritz along cupboards and floorboards where roaches like to travel. Catnip sachets made with little squares of cheesecloth can be placed on top of the fridge, in between the cabinets and the ceiling and other high places where spritzing can be difficult. Fluffy may just have to get used to the constant high in the kitchen, although other cats have not seemed to notice it in their homes. Of course, the best deterrent for roaches is cleanliness â??before you start spritzing, vacuum the floors and wash down all surfaces with good, hot soapy water. Keeping food and dirty dishes off counters and out of sinks may be your easiest and most natural defense against cockroaches.

Ants

Ants at a picnic are one thing. Ants at a dinner party are another. Ants can be extremely difficult to get rid of because the colony can be quite large – large, hungry and always on the lookout for more food. Again, your best, and first, line of defense is to remove what theyâ??re looking for. Keep open food and dirty dishes off the counters. Wash up any sticky spills and spots. Put the honey, pancake syrup and jelly containers in the fridge or in plastic storage bags â?? the â??zipperedâ? type work best. Eliminate their source of water by stopping all leaks and drips and not leaving any dishes soaking overnight. Now, your next important step in the natural war on ants is to find their point of entry, or the closest point of flat surface to their point of entry. Once youâ??ve discovered where theyâ??re coming in, you have a few choices. Ants donâ??t like cayenne pepper or cloves, so sprinkling a line of either on your counter or floor near their trail should deter them from coming in. A piece of string or yarn can be soaked in citrus oil, cinnamon oil or lemon juice and placed into cracks where ants enter. Line a windowsill or counter top with coffee grounds. Live ants are stopped with a spritz of soapy water. Ants on a deck or porch outdoors can be diverted by placing garlic cloves in between the floorboards. Mint leaves, even herbal mint tea bags, can be placed in areas where ants are known to travel. So, pick one of the above, or try several. Send them scouting elsewhere!

Spiders

Spiders are not only a nuisance, but also a health hazard, as well. Brown recluse bites can cause death, amputation and disfigurement. Black widows have been known to make victims ill, (though no one has died from a black widow bite in the US in the last ten years.) In short, they may keep other insects like flies and moths at bay, but they can be risky to have around. Spiders, by nature, are a bit harder to be rid of, as they like to live in out-of-the-way, hard-to-access places. They take a bit more precaution, too, on your part. Remember to always wear long sleeves, pants and gloves when searching and destroying spider habitats. Spiders like the dark spaces under beds, couches and chairs. They love any little crack in brick or paneled walls. They also love to hide in the cracks between the woodwork and the doors and windows of our homes. If a broom canâ??t reach them, try the vacuum hose with the crevice tool attachment. Spiders like to hide in clutter and clothing thatâ??s been lying about, as well, so itâ??s best to keep things picked up. Spray spiders directly with one of the following essential oils: rose, citronella, lavender, peppermint, cinnamon, tea tree or citrus. Mix 5 tablespoons of any of the above oils with 5 tablespoons natural lavender soap in a quart of water to create a spider repellent spray. This can be used to spray the foundation of your home, around windows and doors, even inside the outside trash bins to keep the pesky eight legged critters out of your space.

Pest control neednâ??t be smelly, dangerous chemicals and high exterminating bills. You can keep your home free of pests and free of environmental dangers, too.

Gone Insect Band offers all natural choices for bug band including the essential oils of peppermint and lavender. Visit us online for an effective and safe way to protect from insects.

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Pesticides to Get Rid of Bed Bugs

By Janet Wilson MCIJ | No comments
Diagram showing development of pesticide resis...
Image via Wikipedia

An integrated pest management strategy is required when exterminating or getting rid of bed bugs.

Available in the market are several pesticides to control bed bugs. The list of pesticides for the purpose can be a long one, and you may easily access them or buy them in the market.

But professional help from pest control operators are necessary because small failures and mistakes in applying pesticides to control bedbugs may cause more serious problems.

Pesticides formulations

The most common pesticides and insecticides, from the long list of available ones in the market, for controlling bedbugs usually are classified as:

Contact insecticides. These substances have their own long list. Most bed bugs pesticides contain a number of contact insecticides that have the ability to kill bed bugs instantly when they come or get into direct contact with surfaces with the pesticide or its residues.

Contact insecticides are normally made up of pyrethoids, which are formulated synthetically or from natural extracts from chrysanthemum flowers. These substances tend to emit smell that instantly knocks out bed bugs.

However, bed bugs may develop repelling properties or characteristics against the substance. Hence, using contact insecticides may not mean killing bed bugs, but preventing them from getting into surfaces applied with the pesticide.

Insect growth regulators or IGR. These insecticide is also common among the long list of pesticides for controlling bed bugs. The pesticide does not directly target adult or crawling bed bugs. The pesticides attack on bedbugs is based on the principle that the youngsters are more vulnerable.

IGRs affect and directly exterminate eggs or bed bugs that have just hatched. The eggs and the young bed bugss development are hindered and stalled, thus, no new generation of bed bugs will follow the current one.

IGR application is not a quick way to control bed bugs. From among the other pesticides in the currently existing list, IGR is the slowest, or the insecticide that will have results in the longest time.

But IGRs are truly effective. No doubt about that that. All you have to do is wait. Slowly, but surely, that is.

Insecticidal dusts. Insecticidal dusts are those in the list that are directly applied or spayed to bed bugs. The insecticide is made up or conveyed into dusts, which are directly aimed at crawling bed bugs.

Insecticidal dusts, on the other hand, is the most potent compared to other pesticides in the list. The substance works by ruining bed bugs outer waxy coats, causing the bed bugs to dry out easily.

These pesticides usually are made up of fine granules of silica powder or ground glass to ensure efficiency. The fact makes it very harmful to humans, too.

Insecticidal dusts are often applied to crevices or cracks in the floor or wall that are suspiciously infested with bed bugs.

List of pesticides that control bed bugs

The list of pesticides to control bed bugs is ever growing. Every year a handful of additional insecticides make the list longer. This acknowledges how people are concerned with the increasing annoyance and discomfort from having bed bugs at home.

The most common pesticides available in the market are: Pyrethrins, Tempo, Allethrin, Delta Dust Flee/ Dragnet, Malathion, Drione Dust and Suspend SC. The list is very incomplete, but the above mentioned are the most common and easily purchasable in the market today.

The short listed pesticides are commonly sprayed into areas suspected of being habitat for bed bugs.

As mentioned in the pesticides categories, these sprays are aimed at knocking out bed bugs directly by attacking their physical vulnerabilities.

Professional help from seasoned pest control operators, however, is needed in applying or using the pesticides. The insecticides may also cause a long list of harmful effects to humans that may inhale the spray or may have skin contacts with the pesticide residues.

In case, any allergic reaction or physical counter-reaction is experienced due to the pesticides, consult or immediately seek advise of your physician or family doctor.

Prevention is still on top of the list

Yes, of course. An ounce of prevention is way better than pounds of cure. The statement applies to the control of bed bugs infestation. Hygiene and regular room checks by pest control personnel can do wonders in your fight against bed bugs.

Education and knowledge about what to do and how to deal with bedbugs will definitely get into the top of our list inn fighting bed bug infestation.

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