Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've switched to showering at night and haven't gotten a bite since. Maybe a coincidence, but I recommend it.
Why is this? Do they get washed off in the shower before biting?
NP they definitely are on you for quite a while before biting (unlike mosquitoes). They also like to travel to your bra/underwear/groin to bite you because the skin is more sensitive, which means they walked on you to get there.
Anonymous wrote:My son got a bunch of bug bites on his torso. They are small red bumps with a tiny white dot in the center. At first I thought it’s flea bites but now I realized it’s oak mite bites. Never heard of it before. Ugh… what else is there?
Anonymous wrote:I read that bug spray doesn’t work. Only staying inside. Has anyone else used lidocaine? The one thing I’m seeing is that my body seems less sensitive to it over time. Less swelling, less itchy, and shorter duration (5-7 days per bite).
Anonymous wrote:Not in dc but in the dmv area and I think I have these bites too. No one else in my family does though. They are itchy and huge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've switched to showering at night and haven't gotten a bite since. Maybe a coincidence, but I recommend it.
Why is this? Do they get washed off in the shower before biting?
NP they definitely are on you for quite a while before biting (unlike mosquitoes). They also like to travel to your bra/underwear/groin to bite you because the skin is more sensitive, which means they walked on you to get there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've switched to showering at night and haven't gotten a bite since. Maybe a coincidence, but I recommend it.
Why is this? Do they get washed off in the shower before biting?