NikoS
Active Member
It also depends on where they came from. Our neighbors had them and didn't want to spray. The exterminator told us that they will just keep coming back. We moved.
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It also depends on where they came from. Our neighbors had them and didn't want to spray. The exterminator told us that they will just keep coming back. We moved.
Absolutly true.
this is how i got my BB's.
Complain to management/condo board.
I now routinly spray in all vent and electrical housings and around doors once a month.
I think it's time buildings do MANDITORY routine spraying in all units.
If a tenate dosen't like it, THEY CAN MOVE.
My worst nightmare: I have them. I went away to Europe for 3 weeks dreading finding bedbugs or bringing them back with me. I took all the precautions and quarantined all my luggage and clothes and took a long shower just in case.
My 3 weeks of habit building in checking mattresses for bugs led me to do it at home as well. I found one! Then 3 more.
All the psychological effects mentioned along the articles in this thread are true. I can't sleep and I feel like I won't ever sleep until I know they're gone for sure.
This looks to be a light problem right now so I'm going to get to work on it right now, as soon as my building's landlord office opens.
MetroMan, you have my sympathies. Seriously. Just the thought of bed bugs gives me the heebie jeebies, and I'm obsessive about checking hotels and vacuuming my bed, just in case.Thanks a lot guys for the advice. The exterminator came in today to have a look and will return in the morning to blast the mothereffers.
I didn't sleep a wink last night. I put all my clothes in dryers (took up the entire laundry mat) and sealed everything in plastic garbage bags. They're all mounting up on a glass table (can bed bugs climb upside down on glass?)
I did some research and heard a lot of good things about diatomaceous earth. I'm heading up to a store on Bloor called Grassroots that sells it. I'll powder up the legs of my bed which will give me at least a little peace of mind. I've also been vacuuming obsessively around my bed. Thanks dt_toronto_geek on the advice to not sleep on the couch. I guess I have to just sleep on the bed and act as bait for them to walk over the D-earth.
As much as I realize that they're just bugs that are mostly harmless, there's this stigma associated with bed bugs that makes it feel like you've just contracted an STD or SARS. I only told my best friend and even she sounds a little hesitant to meet me now. The rental office manager told me it couldn't be bed bugs because all the tenants are clean middle class people. That's the reaction I expected. She's probably surprised because she's been in my apartment and commented on how clean and organized it always looks.
Tuscani, I'll also be following your advice and picking up the can of Raid Spider Blaster. I will take no chances on letting this problem grow.
The good news is that as far as I can tell, I haven't been bitten once yet. Maybe they don't like my blood.
Sticky boards are great; I've used them for mice. However, be careful with them because they are ... STICKY! Blankets, clothes, pets, books will all stick to them so place them carefully and remember that they're there.MetroMan I think I know where you live based on past posts (of course I won't say where), if it's where I think there have indeed been other incidences in there - my friend had them about a year & a half - two years ago. He doesn't know if he brought them in or if they came from another unit but the problem was solved quickly & permanently. Anyway, re: diatomaceous earth there is a lot conflicting information & opinions on that product. The best use for it from all that I've read is to spread it sparingly along baseboards (after your problem is solved as a precaution) and inside of cable/electrical/phone boxes. Take off the covers in the problem area(s) and put a teaspoon or so inside of it then screw the covers back on, these are prime areas where they travel from suite to suite. To best monitor activity go to Canadian Tire (I've also seen them at Home Hardware at Parliament & Carlton) and buy those sticky pads in the pest control section, they are about 5" X 8" & put one under each leg of your bed. Bed bugs cannot jump or fly but they can climb up pretty much anything. If you have these sticky pads under the legs of your bed (plus keep your headboard a few inches away from the wall) - along with other strategic locations along walls etc. you can monitor activity because once they try to climb over the sticky pads they become trapped in the glue and cannot get out. We use them for tracing mice at work, even they can't get out of them. Other things you mentioned above sound like your doing everything absolutely right. You'll be okay bud.