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Flea Market Finds: Avoid fleas (or bedbugs) at the flea market – Charleston Gazette-Mail (subscription)
Courtesy photo
Flea markets got their name from French markets where shoppers worried about fleas in old items.
Do you remember as a child hearing about people going to flea markets? Like me, did you think they were actually selling fleas at this market?
How did flea markets get their name?
It seems in the early days, the original outdoor markets in Paris were in less than desirable neighborhoods and often featured items that were tattered, shabby and quite possibly full of fleas. The French phrase marche aux puces was given to such markets and literally means market of the fleas.
In todays world of dumpster diving, Facebook flipping and yard sales, how do you know if you are bringing something that has the potential to live on in more ways than one into your home? If, like me, you cannot give up your junk-loving habit, there are a few things you can do to protect your home from unwanted visitors.
n Never, ever buy or bring home a used mattress from a thrift store or flea market. Bedbugs hide in the coils and can live there for months in between meals. Tiny eggs and brown droppings are signs of these critters and your cue to stay away.
n Upholstered furniture can be a great buy at a flea market, but buyer beware! If possible, know your vendor, and only buy from someone who is reputable. If you do spy a comfy chair, dont be shy about taking the cushions off and inspecting it for signs of infestation.
n If you do take the leap and buy an upholstered piece of furniture, consider having it professionally cleaned before bringing it into your home.
n Wrap used clothing in a plastic bag and freeze it for three days. Bedbugs cannot survive freezing temperatures. Once you thaw out the clothing, place it in the dryer on high heat to kill any remaining bugs or eggs.
If you called and left your information with me about the recent American Pickers Flea Market Finds article, it has been forwarded to the show. Mike and Frank are finished picking in our area, but they will keep your information on file for the next time they come into our area.
Lesa Smith is owner of Salvaged to Sassy, a shop for fine vintage home decor, custom painting and more located at 2120 Pennsylvania Ave., in Charleston. The shop is open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. For more information, follow Salvaged to Sassy on Facebook.
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Flea Market Finds: Avoid fleas (or bedbugs) at the flea market - Charleston Gazette-Mail (subscription)
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Most Americans fear bed bugs but can’t spot one – WTAE Pittsburgh
WTAE Pittsburgh | Most Americans fear bed bugs but can't spot one WTAE Pittsburgh I heard people came all the way from Oregon just to be here today. It's so overwhelming and brings so much joy to our family. We are just so excited and so happy and so grateful. It is just a blessing, Baumunk said. A person gave a pug to Hayden and ... |
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Bed Bugs Are Most Drawn to This Color – Mind & Body …
No two words stoke fear faster than bed bugs. Theyre easy to spread, hard to see and nearly impossible, it seems, to eradicate.
Thankfully, a new study published in the Journal of Medical Entomology sussed out what could be a useful weapon against them: color.
The scientists made tiny tents out of folded cardstock in eight different colors and placed them in Petri dishes. They then plopped a bed bug in the middle, who had 10 minutes to decide which tent to hide in.
Overall, bed bugs strongly tended to choose red tents over the other colors, almost 29% of the time. Black was a close runner-up, drawing in bed bugs 23% of the time. Bed bugs pretty much avoided green and yellow tents.
That might be because colors like green and yellow signal the outdoors or brightly lit areas, places where bed bugs arent typically found. And as for their love of red? We originally thought the bed bugs might prefer red because blood is red and thats what they feed on, said study co-author Corraine McNeill, assistant professor of biology at Union College in Nebraska, in a statement. However, after doing the study, the main reason we think they preferred red is because bed bugs themselves appear red, so they go to these harborages because they want to be with other bed bugs, as they are known to exist in aggregations.
Their color preferences depended on whether they were hungry, fed, old or young. Still, red and black were overwhelmingly the harbors of choice.
So should you burn your red sheets? If only it were that simple. On its own, the color of your linens probably isnt going to inoculate you against an infestation, the scientists point out (though theyre not ruling out that possibility yet). The scientists do think, however, that this insight into a bed bugs favorite color could one day enhance the efficacy of bed bug traps.
This article originally appeared on Time.com.
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Bed Bug Infestations | Bed Bug Eggs – livescience.com
A bed bug nymph in the process of ingesting a blood meal.
The common bed bug mainly survives on human blood, but what happens when that human has upped his or her blood alcohol content with a few glasses of a nice red wine? New research from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln suggests bed bugs are not as fond of alcohol as their boozy hosts, which may lead to fewer bug bites.
According to the study, bed bugs prefer alcohol-free blood to blood with alcohol in it; the higher the blood alcohol concentration (BAC), the less the bugs eat. And, because there is a direct link between blood intake and reproduction rates, those bugs also lay fewer eggs.
"[Bed bugs] need a blood meal to grow and to molt and to reproduce," explained Ralph Narain, a Ph.D. candidate who conducted the work as part of his dissertation. "And one of their main hosts are humans, and we consume a lot of stuff. Alcohol was one of the easier ones to start with."
Narain presented the findings last week at the National Conference on Urban Entomology in Atlanta.
How bed bugs imbibe
While it's fun to imagine graduate students knocking back beers and feeding bed bugs on their arms, Narain took a more scientific approach in his experiment. He mixed 200 proof ethanol the same compound estimated by a Breathalyzer into four samples of expired blood from the Nebraska Blood Bank until he had BACs of 0.010, 0.025, 0.050 and 0.100 (0.08 is the legal limit for driving). A control sample contained no alcohol.
Next, he selected 20 adult bed bugs for each blood sample, weighed them, fed them their respective samples, and weighed them again. He repeated the experiment six times.
The average mass of the bed bugs that fed on the clean blood increased by over 100 percent. Those that fed on the blood with the lowest BAC, 0.010, increased just 60 percent, and the number decreased for each increase in alcohol. The bed bugs that fed on the 0.100 BAC sample went up a mere 12.5 percent.
As for the eggs, the control groups laid an average of 44 after the feeding, while those that fed on the highest BAC laid an average of just 12.
It's unclear whether the alcohol affected the adult bugs' behavior or their offspring's development, although future tests might attempt to measure both. Narain also plans to run tests on other drugs, although he wouldn't officially disclose which.
Way toward pest control?
So, can we just knock back a few glasses of wine every night to keep the bed bugs away? Probably not. "I'm not going to suggest someone should consume alcohol to control bed bugs," Narain said.
Ill health affects aside, it likely wouldn't help curb an infestation. While the bed bugs do feed less on alcohol-laced blood, they still feed, and while they lay fewer eggs, up to 95 percent still hatch. And it just takes a few to create a nuisance.
Dini Miller, an entomologist and bed bug expert from Virginia Tech, agreed: "I don't know what sort of implications it has ultimately, because unfortunately they still produce enough eggs to cause an infestation. So while they feed less, still, we're not going to experience less of a problem. But it's very interesting to know."
Brooke Borel is a contributor to Life's Little Mysteries, and is currently writing a book about bed bugs. For more crazy bed bugs stories, follow her on Twitter: @brookeborel
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Bed bug awareness poor among US travelers, but reactions are strong – Phys.Org
June 13, 2017 How would US travelers respond to problems with a hotel guest room? In a survey conducted by researchers at the University of Kentucky, respondents showed a far stronger reaction to signs of bed bugs than to any other room deficiency. Credit: Entomological Society of America
Most business and leisure travelers in the United States can't identify a bed bug, and yet the tiny pest evokes a stronger response in hotel guests than any other potential room deficiencyputting the hospitality industry in a difficult spot.
In a survey of U.S. travelers conducted by researchers at the University of Kentucky, 60 percent said they would switch hotels if they found evidence of bed bugs in a guest room. Meanwhile, no more than a quarter said they would switch hotels for factors such as signs of smoking or dirty towels or linens. In the same survey, however, just 35 percent of business travelers and 28 percent of leisure travelers correctly identified a bed bug in a lineup of other common insects. The results of the research are soon to be published in American Entomologist, the quarterly magazine of the Entomological Society of America.
"Considering all the media attention paid to bed bugs in recent years, the fact that most travelers still have a poor understanding of them is troubling," says Michael Potter, Ph.D., extension professor in UK's Department of Entomology and co-author of the study.
It is particularly problematic given the central role that online reviews play in travelers' selection of where to stay. More than half of survey respondents said they would be very unlikely to choose a hotel with a single online report of bed bugs.
"From a hotel industry perspective, it's worrisome that a single online report of bed bugs would cause the majority of travelers to book different accommodations, irrespective of whether the report is accurate. Furthermore, the incident could have involved only one or a few rooms, which the hotel previously eradicated," says Jerrod M. Penn, Ph.D., postdoctoral scholar in UK's Department of Agricultural Economics and lead author of the study.
Other findings in the survey include:
Potter notes that the public's lack of understanding of bed bugs "contributes to their spread throughout society as a whole." But the hospitality industry must deal with both the pest itself and consumers' strong, if ill-informed, attitudes about bed bugs.
"Hotels and others in the hospitality sector should develop a reputation management plan to prudently respond to online reports of bed bugs in their facility. Hotels should also train their housekeeping and engineering staffs to recognize and report bed bugs in the earliest possible stages, when infestations are more manageable. Similarly important is training front desk and customer service employees to respond promptly and empathetically when incidents arise within the hotel," says Wuyang Hu, Ph.D., professor in UK's Department of Agricultural Economics and senior author of the study..
Explore further: Room upgrade programs can increase hotel profits up to 35 percent
More information: Jerrod M. Penn et al, Bed Bugs and Hotels, American Entomologist (2017). DOI: 10.1093/ae/tmx023
With travelers spending more than $278 billion on accommodations in the U.S. last year, hotel chains that explore creative new ways to engage customers have the potential to significantly increase their profits. Standby upgrade ...
When businesswomen travel, well-lit hallways, comfortable beds and rooms with big windows are not enough to make them want to return to a hotel. They need to feel valued.
(PhysOrg.com) -- During the past three to four years, the instances of bed bug infestations have increased at an alarming rate at motels and hotels around the world. Instances of bed bug infestations have been reported at ...
(PhysOrg.com) -- Travelers who use a hotel's Internet network risk the possibility of data theft, concludes a new study from Cornell's School of Hotel Administration.
Google is expanding its hotel business, offering several new ways for travelers to learn about accommodations.
Online lodging service Airbnb is allowing travelers from around the world to book stays in private homes in Cuba after the San Francisco-based company received a special authorization from the Obama administration, Airbnb ...
Army ants scare up a lot of food when they're on the move, which makes following them valuable for predator birds. But instead of competing and chasing each other off from the ant "raids," as scientists had thought, birds ...
Today's soybeans are typically golden yellow, with a tiny blackish mark where they attach to the pod. In a field of millions of beans, nearly all of them will have this look. Occasionally, however, a bean will turn up half-black, ...
Antimicrobial resistance is one of the biggest threats to global health, affecting anyone, at any age, in any country, according to the World Health Organization. Currently, 700,000 deaths each year are attributed to antimicrobial ...
DNA found at archaeological sites reveals that the origins of our domestic cat are in the Near East and ancient Egypt. Cats were domesticated by the first farmers some 10,000 years ago. They later spread across Europe and ...
One in three people has a potentially nasty parasite hiding inside their bodytucked away in tiny cysts that the immune system can't eliminate and antibiotics can't touch.
In a new study from Lawson Health Research Institute (Lawson) and Western University, researchers have shown that probiotics can potentially protect honey bees from the toxic effects of pesticides.
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One bedbug bites about once a week, so it's difficult to notice. It needs five feedings to grow into an adult, and once it does it lays several eggs a day, which take about a week or two to hatch, so after a couple weeks of delay you get a multitude of bugs that start biting you in the night, and it takes a week or two more for you to realize that it's not a regular rash.
So then you're a month in the infestation, there are hundreds of tiny bugs hiding in the house and you're throwing away your bed and spraying poisons along the skirting boards to get rid of them. That's not a very nice souvenir.
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