Anonymous wrote:Is anyone else the only person in the house getting bitten?
My teen daughter keeps getting these bites. She doesn’t spend any notable time outside. We keep washing her bedding and blankets, but she gets a few new ones every couple days. I had one a few weeks ago, but none since. We haven’t traveled or had guests, so it’s not bedbugs.
They almost look like hives when they first appear...raised white bumps, then they spread out into flatter red patches, then get raised again and eventually kind of fade...and they itch like mad the whole time.
Anonymous wrote:I don't remember these from 17 years ago, and apparently they are a relatively new (2004?) invasive species. I hope we have cicadas in 17 years, and these mites didn't destroy the population.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't remember these from 17 years ago, and apparently they are a relatively new (2004?) invasive species. I hope we have cicadas in 17 years, and these mites didn't destroy the population.
I have been wondering this, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you guys distinguishing these bites from mosquitoes or small nymph ticks?
From the descriptions posted sounds like the bites are itchier (hard to find relief) and can ooze.
Anonymous wrote:I don't remember these from 17 years ago, and apparently they are a relatively new (2004?) invasive species. I hope we have cicadas in 17 years, and these mites didn't destroy the population.
Anonymous wrote:How are you guys distinguishing these bites from mosquitoes or small nymph ticks?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read they don’t bite for 4 hours. So the rev is to wear fitted clothing that covers as much skin as possible, change once inside, and hot shower to wash away. I’m going to try limiting outdoor excursions to 1-2 hours and following other recs to see if that helps.
My husband dressed like he was going inside the reactor core at Chernobyl when he cut the grass on Sunday (followed by a hot shower) and he still woke up with a bite on his chest Monday morning.
I don't know what the solution is.
Oh that’s a bummer. How long would you say he was outside?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I read they don’t bite for 4 hours. So the rev is to wear fitted clothing that covers as much skin as possible, change once inside, and hot shower to wash away. I’m going to try limiting outdoor excursions to 1-2 hours and following other recs to see if that helps.
My husband dressed like he was going inside the reactor core at Chernobyl when he cut the grass on Sunday (followed by a hot shower) and he still woke up with a bite on his chest Monday morning.
I don't know what the solution is.