Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I put library books in the freezer for 1-2 weeks before I read them, for this exact reason. If you have a clothes dryer that has a shelf (so books won't tumble around) you could also do that (high heat, 30-40 mins).
I'm intrigued by the dryer idea and bet it would indeed kill bugs, but isn't that a fire risk?
I believe studies have shown that home freezers don't reach low enough temperatures to kill all life stages of bedbugs.
OP here -- I put one of my daughter's books in the dryer in her backpack, and it was somewhat damaged by the heat. So I don't know if dryers are really great for books. But I am intrigued by the possibilities of a low-heat oven.
Ooooooh. I'm the most bedbug-phobic person you'll ever meet (having had the pleasure a few years ago), but THAT sounds like a fire risk to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I put library books in the freezer for 1-2 weeks before I read them, for this exact reason. If you have a clothes dryer that has a shelf (so books won't tumble around) you could also do that (high heat, 30-40 mins).
I'm intrigued by the dryer idea and bet it would indeed kill bugs, but isn't that a fire risk?
I believe studies have shown that home freezers don't reach low enough temperatures to kill all life stages of bedbugs.
OP here -- I put one of my daughter's books in the dryer in her backpack, and it was somewhat damaged by the heat. So I don't know if dryers are really great for books. But I am intrigued by the possibilities of a low-heat oven.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I put library books in the freezer for 1-2 weeks before I read them, for this exact reason. If you have a clothes dryer that has a shelf (so books won't tumble around) you could also do that (high heat, 30-40 mins).
I'm intrigued by the dryer idea and bet it would indeed kill bugs, but isn't that a fire risk?
I believe studies have shown that home freezers don't reach low enough temperatures to kill all life stages of bedbugs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just LOOK at the books before you cozy up with them. Bedbugs are obvious. So are the little guys, and they're not really a problem.
Bedbugs are not obvious. They're really good at squeezing into crevices, their immature stages are tiny and may not have much color, and their eggs (laid in barely accessible crevices) are actually quite hard to spot. Also, books can have hundreds of pages. How carefully will you inspect each one?!!