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Daily Archives: June 23, 2017
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Bed Bugs | Louisiana Bed Bug Inspection
They live everywhere, not just in your mattress. Bedbugs can hide in furniture and behind wall coveringsand you are on the menu. Getting rid of bed bugs is not an easy process. Bed bug infestation will require treatment by a pest control experts. We at J&J Exterminating are extremely concerned with the latest news reports concerning the spread of bed bugs. The insects are spreading quickly through luggage, hand bags, and purses. Bed bugs have feasted on sleeping humans for thousands of years. Perhaps spurred by increases of international travel, bed bugs are becoming a problem once again. The risk of encountering bed bugs increases if you spend time in places with high turnovers of night-time guests such as hotels, hospitals or homeless shelters. Bed bugs are reddish brown, oval-shaped, flat, and about the size of an apple seed. During the day, they hide in the cracks and crevices of beds, box springs, headboards and bed frames. Its a daunting task to eliminate bed bugs from your home. Professional help is recommended. A female bed bug can lay more than 200 eggs in her lifetime, which typically lasts for about 10 months. Newly hatched bed bugs are nearly colorless, so they are hard to spot. They shed their skin five times as they grow, and need a blood meal for each molt.
We are equipped with the latest technology to exterminate bed bugs and to assist in minimizing the outbreak. We are offering FREE INSPECTIONS of your home or business.
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Bed Bugs | Louisiana Bed Bug Inspection
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Bed Bugs Are Back: What You Need To Know – WCNC
WFMY 2:50 PM. EDT June 22, 2017
Experts say bed bugs can actually sneak in to your phone or your laptop when you're asleep! (Photo: Stephen Dalton, NHPA, Custom)
They're small, blood-sucking parasites perhaps living in the corners and crevices of our beds, feeding off us while we sleep.
Bed bugs, for decades, existed as myths,part of a rhyme our parents told us beforebed. Nowthey've made anunwelcomereturn and thosewho know the buggers best say it's high time we starttaking them seriously.
After all, getting a bed bug infestation "is a bit of a crap shoot," concededUniversity of Kentucky entomologist Michael Potter, meaning all of us are at risk.
Bed bugs used to be "incredibly common" in the early 20th century, Potter said. Back then, peopleroutinely checked for them and carried insecticide while traveling.
But the introduction ofpotent insecticides killed most of our bed bugs, banishing them from our homes and consciousnesses. The bugs,Potter said, disappeared from about the mid-1950s to the late 1990s. They became so rare people could no longer identify them and a new generation of pest control professionals weren't equipped to fight them, noted University of Florida research scientistRoberto Pereira.
But then they came "roaring back in the last five to seven years," Potter said, creeping into our couches, our apartments and eveninto the hotel rooms of our NBA stars. The reason why is a mystery, although Pereira and Potter suggest it's because the once potent insecticide is now banned, people travel more and the bugshave grown resistantto modern insecticides.
Now we're left avoiding them. But there are ways. Here's what you need to know:
If you've never seen one, bed bugs are small, flat, reddish-brown bugs about the size of Abraham Lincoln's head on a penny.
They have an oblong shell and a tiny head. They typically live in areas where people sleep because at night they feed on our blood.
Unlike ticks or fleas, bed bugs don't latch on when they feed. They bite then scurry away to digest. "It's a creepy parasite," described Potter. "It's a little bit like Dracula."
Bed bugs have to feed on human blood about once a week, Potter said. However, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention claims they can live several months without a "blood meal."
Potter said bed bugs will adapt to your schedule. For instance, if you work the overnight shift, they'll learn to feed on you during the day.
Bed bugs don't form colonies or nest, but they do aggregate, usually within about eight feet of where a person sleeps.
It's popular to find clusters of them on beds and recliners. Very skittish, bed bugs don't like movement, which is why they feed on us while we sleep.
Popular places for them to congregate are in the seams of mattresses, in bed frames, headboards, dressers andbehind wallpaper or clutter. A bed bug, notes the CDC, can travel more than 100 feet in a single night.
Bed bug bites look like raised welts and can cause serious allergic reactions in some people.
But a third of people don't experience any reaction. This only helps the infestation spread because people don't know they have the bugs.
The stigma that a filthy home is more at risk of getting bed bugs just isn't true, Potter claims.
Unlike cockroaches, rats or flies, who feed on filth, bed bugs feed on blood. They only need a body. Bed bugs, the CDC said, have been found in five-star hotels and resorts.
Bed bugs are mostoften foundin major metropolitan areas. However, over time, the pests have found their way to rural areas.
Anywhere there are close quarters, Potter said, the odds are better. It's a numbers game, he said, because the more people coming and going from a building increases the odds the bugs will find their way there.
Low-income housing also is a target because many people use old bedding and building staff may not take the steps to address the problem.
They don't carry disease
Bed bugs do not carry disease. At most, they're annoyances which cause itching and a lack of sleep.
Experts say people bring an infestation into a home after they've gone to a place with bed bugs and somehow brought them back to their house.
This can happen just about anywhere: At hotels, while ridingbusses and trains, vacationing on cruise ships and bunking in dorm rooms. They attach to stuff, Potter said, not people. He's seen them on the bottoms of shoes, baseball caps and even Beanie Babies.
But it's unlikely you'll get them from places where people don't sleep. The places where peopleget some shut-eye are most at risk.
Potter advises people check aroundhotel beds whenfirst checking in. Pull back the sheets, check the seam and corners of the mattress near the pillows and the headboard. Look for black spots, the bugs themselves or yellowish skins that bed bugs shed.
Try not to spread out in your hotel room. Don't place your open suitcaseagainst a wall. Try to keep it closed and set it on a hard surface. Don't spread clothes across the hotel room.
Potter said each of us needs to strike a balance as to how paranoid we'll be in avoiding bed bugs.
"You got to be careful because you take all the joy out life," he said. "People just have to decide how apprehensive do they want to be."
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2017 USATODAY.COM
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Bed Bugs Are Back: What You Need To Know - WCNC
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Spiders, Snakes, Bedbugs and No Bathroom Privacy Oh My! – ChicagoNow (blog)
"Cranks Creek Survival Center" read the sign. And I thought, Will I really survive this week?
This was the introduction to my first-ever mission trip. Toto, we were not in the Chicago suburbs anymore.
On our job site, we got to see dead poisonous snakes, a living brown recluse spider, experienced a bedbug "scare" in the dormer and witnessed two hospital visits from volunteers who got hurt on their job sites. We got rained on almost every afternoon as we worked, but kept going.
And, it turned out to be one of the best times of our lives, and both my daughter and I would do it again. Really.
You have to understand how impactful this statement is. My daughter is a girly-girl who desiresto have lovely hair, perfect makeup and manicured nails. When the heavy-duty house projects happen at home, she is nowhere to be found.
That latter statement may change.
Last week, my daughter filled and carried buckets of gravel, moved heavy debris, used a power drill to help assemble a porch, drained buckets of dirty water and helped create a water filtration drain using PVC pipe, porch screens, and other materials found on site.
About 40 teens and young adults plus10 chaperones landed in a tiny southeast Kentucky town called "Cranks Creek" to help residents there through Catholic Mission Trips (CMT).
We stayed at the survival center, which featured no air conditioning, a dormer with old, basic bunk beds, cracked linoleum floors, a broken mirror and a fickle electric system.
For facilities, two shower stalls and two toilets for each gender.
It wouldn't take a AAA award for cleanliness, although we all did try to do our part to keep things as neat and clean as possible.
The truth was, the place was lovingly constructed and served its purpose well. It was just shall I say "seasoned" a bit.
Meal times consisted of teams of young people/chaperones on a rotating schedule preparing breakfast, setting out the assembly line of food to pack lunches or cooking and cleaning up dinner.
It was as close to living in a commune as you can imagine. And you know what? It all worked.
Each morning, the nearby rooster crowing at 4:30 AM would either awaken the teens, or, if that didn't work, one of our chaperones used his wonderful, mighty singing voice to wake them up at 6:30.
They would eat breakfast, make their sack lunches and depart to their job sites. Afterwards, they'd come back, wait in long lines for showers and then eat dinner. Cell and internet service was spotty, so kids spent their free time playing spike ball, basketball, chatting with the local children who came by to talk with them, singing songs, playing cards, or simply talking.
Arranged evening activities included games planned by the CMT young adult ministers, which were hilarious, challenging and fun, listening to CMT-lead witness talks and enjoying the inspiring guitar music and soothing yet powerful voice of the musician arranged to join us.
Everyone knows that you don't need money and "things" to be happy. But my family and I live in an area where a certain way of life is expected, and so money and "things" becomes important to impressionable teens.
Not this week though.
Clearly, I was taken aback by the conditions of the survival center where we were staying when we first arrived. It's called "survival center" because it was built after a flash flood ravaged the area in the 1970s. The people who endured that were true survivors. Although at times I felt like I was on a "survivor" TV show, I was just managing to get by in different housing conditions than I'm used to for one week.
I found this link that featured the Survival Center on PBS.org under a section called "Chasing The Dream: Poverty and Opportunity in America" that showcases rural concerns in and what people are doing about it. If you're looking for a little more information on the center, I invite you to visit the site.
The folks living here know about hard times. According to the PBS web site, 30 percent of the county lives below the poverty line. A coalmine that provided many jobs for generations has resulted in dwindling employment for decades.
And yet, the people our group met were among the most pleasant and welcoming I've ever encountered.
We met a most colorful, enjoyable young man who joined us as we worked on his parents' home, and our team loved him.
Another group was invited to attend a family wedding after working on their home.
One of our teens said he was touched when a woman, knowing he got injured and was taken to the hospital while working on another job site, saw him the next day and said, before he even had a chance to introduce himself, "I've heard all about you and I've been praying for you ever since I heard you got hurt."
The folks we helped had various needs. One woman was having knee surgery and needed a ramp built for her home. A man had cancer and a multitude of other health issues and required a ramp to be built so that a gurney could enter his home to transport him. Another family had a home that needed significant repairs all over the house.
Ours started as a porch replacement, but due to water pooling under the porch from an underground spring, the porch supports had rotted from the humidity. So we worked on creating a pipe filtration system, a well and a ditch to divert the water from the porch. Then we stripped out the rotted support materials so that we could replace the porch boards.
Whatever project each of us worked on and it was hard labor for our group the teens (and adults) truly rose to the occasion.
I loved hearing the teens talk about how beautiful they thought the area was, and it truly was. There was lovely scenery with the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains in view of our work site and all around as we drove back and forth from the center to the home we were working on.
The kids even said that the Survival Center really started to feel homey after a day or two. So many made great memories. They deepened their existing friendships, got to know other teens on the trip better and chatted with our young adult leaders from CMT.
The adults from our parish had a history of attending these trips and were veterans. One of them had attended mission trips for over 20 years, and I thought it was awesome for the younger people to see the vitality and energy he exuded in addition to another retired gentleman from our parish. They were funny and creative, and brought a lot of experience with them (as well as power tools and know-how!).
Most of the women had attended mission trips in previous years and were very prepared with everything you could think of to make the trip go well.
It was great for the teens to see older teens and twentysomethings from our church lead by example, and our youth minister is sort of a pied piper for getting teens involved. Barely over 30 and married with a young son, he's just young enough to relate to teens and young adults but mature enough to relate to all the other adults. His carpentry skills and choice of music kept us very productive on our work site!
I came upon a blog called "WordSlingers," and I think it did a great job of summarizing in seven steps why mission trips are good for anybody. Although the author's reasons are religious ones, most of her points could apply to anyone religious or not.
Click here to see the blog author's take on it. I couldn't agree more.
I will admit, I was glad to come home. But I do miss being among all of those great people.
My heart will forever be connected to Harlan, KY. A place I hadn't even heard of a couple of months ago. Amazing how there's always room for more in the human heart.
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Spiders, Snakes, Bedbugs and No Bathroom Privacy Oh My! - ChicagoNow (blog)
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Local Pest Control Warns about Bed Bugs – CIproud.com
Taking an extra look around the room while travelling this summer may be a good idea, because bed bugs can linger in more than just your mattress.
"Mattresses are most commonly where people see bed bugs, but they can be anywhere" said Tazewell County Health Department's Sara Sparkman. "They can be in picture frames, they can be in curtains...they like to hide in cracks and crevices of anything."
American Pest Control's Steve Howell said he's seen around a 10% increase in cases each year.
Howell emphasized bites from the bug are indistiguishable from other bug bites, and a professional assessment is the best way to determine an infestation.
Make sure to inspect any furniture you buy second hand, and the beds of hotel rooms.
Some warning signs are small bites on the body, and specks similar to black pepper on your furniture.
The insects are small and flat, vary in color, and are about half the size of a penny or smaller.
American Pest Control and Tazewell Health Deparmtent both advise to call in the professionals if you suspect they're in your home.
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Local Pest Control Warns about Bed Bugs - CIproud.com
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Bloodsucking bedbugs make a big comeback – WTOP
FILE - In this file photo taken Aug. 25, 2010, a bedbug is found in a mattress at a home in Columbus, Ohio. As bedbugs relentlessly re-enter American life, and we learn how little we can do to stop them, it's increasingly important to know how to avoid them and how to cope if they work their way into our homes and belongings. (AP Photo/Terry Gilliam, File)
WASHINGTON Bedbugs have been around for years but experts believe their populations are now growing and the bloodsuckers are more resilient than ever.
Powerful pesticides such as DDT kept the bugs at bay for much of the 20th century, Raupp said. But the later part of the century saw those stronger pesticides give way to modern, less potent treatments. Now, these more recent treatments are proving ineffective as the bugs become immune to them.
In certain cities around the United States, very high proportions of bedbug populations are almost completely resistant to these pesticides, Raupp said.
The increase in bedbug populations has been seen not only in the U.S. but internationally as well. From hotels, to apartments, to homes and, in some cases, even offices, outbreaks have been reported.
Both a D.C. school and even the offices of the Montgomery County Department of Health have dealt with bedbug infestations over the past year alone.
Fighting back against bedbugs, according to Raupp, means educating everyone on how to spot them, treat them and avoid bringing them home.
Everybodys got to work in a cohesive fashion to get this problem solved; it is going to be a team approach, Raupp said.
Bedbugs, which do not transmit diseases like mosquitoes, are more commonly transported by people during travel.
When traveling, dont be ashamed to toss the bedroom, pulling back bed spreads and sheets to look for the telltale signs of the bugs, Raupp suggested. The signs include actual bedbugs, bedbug skin that has been shed or small, reddish rust-colored spots they leave behind after bites.
Raupp also said said to use a luggage rack in the room for your suitcase and never put your clothes into a dresser in a hotel room. Keep the luggage rack away from the wall so it isnt easy for the bugs to make their way into it.
If there are concerns that bedbug stowaways have made it into a suitcase, Raupp said put all clothes in the dryer on medium or high heat immediately after arriving home.
Thats gonna kill all the active and inactive stages, including eggs of bedbugs, Raupp said.
Another way to keep the bugs out of a home, according to Raupp, is to not bring in secondhand furniture or bedding into a home before thoroughly inspecting them.
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