Pp here - basically I'm a cheap person. I can afford to buy new but I love being able to find something unique at Goodwill and pay $5 for it. However, the fear of having to deal with a bedbug infestation and pay to eradicate it outweighs any enjoyment I might get from bringing home a good "find" from Goodwill. However, this is a serious blow to my identity. I may need therapy!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is disheartening. I love going to Goodwill but I am thinking that I need to stop doing that.Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks pps for the good advice although the first pp made me depressed.I have been going to thrift stores for years and never had any trouble. Obviously, I would never buy furniture there, but didn't think anything of buying t shirts and jean.
Can you still go but put the clothes in a plastic bag and leave them out or in the freezer for a few days?

Anonymous wrote:This is disheartening. I love going to Goodwill but I am thinking that I need to stop doing that.Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks pps for the good advice although the first pp made me depressed.I have been going to thrift stores for years and never had any trouble. Obviously, I would never buy furniture there, but didn't think anything of buying t shirts and jean.
This is disheartening. I love going to Goodwill but I am thinking that I need to stop doing that.Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks pps for the good advice although the first pp made me depressed.I have been going to thrift stores for years and never had any trouble. Obviously, I would never buy furniture there, but didn't think anything of buying t shirts and jean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We picked up bedbugs at a flat in Italy while we were traveling. We were prepared for the worst, especially since the next leg of the trip was staying at the house of cousins we had never met before. Luckily they were very understanding and it was actually fairly easy to get rid of them because they were not in our houses. We washed everything we could in hot hot water and the things we couldn't wash on hot we put in the freezer. The most annoying part was disassembling all of the suitcases to make sure they didn't get into the little cracks.
You have *very* understanding cousins! Glad you were able to resolve the problem so easily.
Anonymous wrote:We picked up bedbugs at a flat in Italy while we were traveling. We were prepared for the worst, especially since the next leg of the trip was staying at the house of cousins we had never met before. Luckily they were very understanding and it was actually fairly easy to get rid of them because they were not in our houses. We washed everything we could in hot hot water and the things we couldn't wash on hot we put in the freezer. The most annoying part was disassembling all of the suitcases to make sure they didn't get into the little cracks.
Anonymous wrote:Heat treatments are believed to be much more effective than chemical treatments. Just be advised that the construction of the home can impose some limitations. For example, older homes with thicker walls may leave some harborage areas unaffected.
And the dogs are not foolproof, although they do seem to catch bugs that human visual inspections miss.
Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden there're bed bug infestations spreading in American cities. What's the situation in Europe and elsewhere? Does anybody know if they're also dealing with the same explosion of cases?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got rid of them!! It was huge pain in the ass.
We picked them up at a hotel. THey were only in my daughter's room. We bagged everything...EVERYTHING!, sealed the mattress, steamed every inch of the furniture/carpet, washed/dried, emptied the closet, removed everything from her walls, used diatomaceous earth in nooks and crannies, etc. It wasn't until we got rid of the bed frame and dresser that it all stopped. We rewashed and steamed in between all of the above steps over a 3 week period. She lived out of bags for 2 months.
Oddly enough, we kept the mattress. The bites slowed considerably after we sealed it in one of these: http://www.amazon.com/SLEEP-ALLERGEN-PROOF-Mattress-ZipCover/dp/B002UBMM4O/ref=sr_1_9?s=home-garden&ie=UTF8&qid=1345298752&sr=1-9&keywords=bed+bug+mattress+protector
I encased all the other mattresses in the house, too.
Good luck! If they are all over the house already, you'll need professional help. Also, be warned that taking the steps we took could lead to a full-house infestation. We didn't really have the money to get pro help and decided to try to handle on our own and move to the pros if it got worse. I recognize there was some risk in that decision.
I'm glad your problem seems to have passed, but the risk in your decision to treat this yourself (and to treat only part of your home) was not only to your own family, but also to anyone who comes into contact with your stuff in any public place.
Anonymous wrote:We got rid of them!! It was huge pain in the ass.
We picked them up at a hotel. THey were only in my daughter's room. We bagged everything...EVERYTHING!, sealed the mattress, steamed every inch of the furniture/carpet, washed/dried, emptied the closet, removed everything from her walls, used diatomaceous earth in nooks and crannies, etc. It wasn't until we got rid of the bed frame and dresser that it all stopped. We rewashed and steamed in between all of the above steps over a 3 week period. She lived out of bags for 2 months.
Oddly enough, we kept the mattress. The bites slowed considerably after we sealed it in one of these: http://www.amazon.com/SLEEP-ALLERGEN-PROOF-Mattress-ZipCover/dp/B002UBMM4O/ref=sr_1_9?s=home-garden&ie=UTF8&qid=1345298752&sr=1-9&keywords=bed+bug+mattress+protector
I encased all the other mattresses in the house, too.
Good luck! If they are all over the house already, you'll need professional help. Also, be warned that taking the steps we took could lead to a full-house infestation. We didn't really have the money to get pro help and decided to try to handle on our own and move to the pros if it got worse. I recognize there was some risk in that decision.