This is another item on the
developing bed bug battle. The take home
here is that a sustained treatment at 50C will kill off the problem
It is not a great plan but it
certainly does the job but is difficult to put into practice.
A better solution is to seal off
the building and bring the ozone level up to 10 parts per million or so. Unfortunately
this is still only available in Vancouver and Seattle. The process has to be professionally
applied. Warning – avoid promoters
selling plasma arc ozone producers – they produce mostly nitric acid which is
what you actually smell.
With ozone nothing will survive
except your friendly strange breathing cockroach.
The bed bug is rapidly recovering
because we do not allow the effective pesticides that ended their past pervasiveness.
Somewhere we have to establish effective public policy for this. On and off is turning out to be stupid.
The Canadian Press – Mon, 21 Feb, 2011 12:48 AM EST
WINNIPEG - A Winnipeg landlord who had bedbugs in his suites has
designed and built his own solution for ridding the pests, he literally bakes
them to death.
Leon Wieler took an old equipment trailer, installed heaters and fans,
and now heats the inside to a temperature that's fatal to bedbugs.
Wieler calls that temperature the "thermal death point."
"It was a matter of necessity. I had my first case of bedbugs
about four years ago. I'm a very hands-on landlord. I do my own repairs, that's
what I do. And the response I was getting from my exterminators wasn't
adequate," explains Wieler, who owns a 36-suite building.
"So I did my research and I became an exterminator and I built my
bedbug oven, because the research has found that heat is the Achilles heel of
the bedbug."
Wieler says he learned extermination himself, but needed a way to treat
furniture, mattresses, TVs and computers.
So Wieler tried putting various items of furnishings in the trailer and
eventually discovered that bedbugs die when the temperature hits 50 C.
It sounds simple, but Wieler says it took nearly four months of
experiments to get the cooker right. Too high a temperature in one spot can
start a fire or melt something. Too low in another spot might mean some bedbugs
survive.
He also had to figure out how long it would take the heat to penetrate
various types of furniture.
"If you're just heating mattresses and couches, you can make the
temperature go very high with no difficulties. If you're wanting to treat TVs
and computers and VCRs, you have to concentrate on a very, very high air flow
and a minimum of heat," Wieler says.
"I don't have an engineering background so I had to learn this all
by trial and error. But trial and error is a good teacher."
For mattresses, he turns the temperature up to over 70 C and cooks them
for about four hours. He bakes electronics at a lower temperature for up to 20
hours.
Cities across the continent have seen a surge in bedbugs, partly
because of an increase in international travel but also because of a ban on
highly toxic pesticides such as DDT and a growing bedbug resistance to
lower-strength insecticides.
Earlier this month, Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger announced
his government is developing a strategy to fight bedbugs that will include
marshalling each municipality in the fight and co-ordinating techniques to
exterminate them to stop the infestation.
Wieler says his cooker is only one component of his bedbug control
strategy. He says he still must make sure tenants are careful not to
reintroduce bedbugs to his building, but he says the cooker has helped keep the
apartments bedbug-free.
The cooker wasn't cheap. The heaters are industrial quality, and Wieler
says he spent about $14,000 just for materials.
Also, about one per cent of items don't survive the trailer treatment.
Unusual types of plastic are usually the problem.
"We once had the plastic turntable ring of a microwave warp. So
the owner put a plate on it and put it in his toaster oven and flatten out and
it was fixed," Wieler says.
"Some kids had Lego that didn't appear to be damaged, but the fit
wasn't as tight as it used to be," he adds.
you think you've contracted bed bugs, better call an exterminator: bed bugs are notoriously difficult to get rid of on your own.
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