The resurgence of the population of bed bugs over the last fifteen years has been blamed on the higher number of people going on long-haul holidays and the enlarged amount of immigration from Asia and Africa. It is not that individuals carry the bed bugs back on their bodies, but bedbugs may have laid eggs in the travellers’ clothing or the bedbugs may have taken refuge in the suitcases.
In this way they are taken home, and being very hardy to temperature change they thrive in their new home country. If the carriers are holiday makers, then the bedbugs could easily be unloaded into the hotel. This is how bed bugs can be distributed unwittingly by humans.
You see, bed bugs do not prosper in a dirty environment of necessity. Bed bugs do not mind whether you dropped a bit of potato on the floor last week and did not pick it up. They do not eat what we eat, even if they are starving. They only eat blood.
If you exist like this, then you will attract mice or rats, cockroaches and ants, but not bed bugs. It is a mistake to think that bedbugs like grime and rubbish. They most likely prefer it quite clean to be honest, but they do need cracks and crevices to hide in, but there are plenty of those in most rooms.
They like to get behind the skirtings and other woodwork. They also like broken plaster, loose wall paper and damaged mattresses. Because they are so thin, they can get into almost any crack. This means that any hotel can be stricken with bedbugs, the Ritz, the Carlton, Holiday Inn – any of them.
This is the problem for us. If it was only run-down, shabby hotels that had bed bugs, we could avoid them, but you just cannot judge a book by its cover.
There are methods of checking your room though. Look out for small bugs that look a bit like an apple seed. Look in the seams of the chairs and check the mattress, if there are any rips in it, have it replaced.
You can also test by lying on the bed to warm it up and then throw back the bed clothes swiftly. You may spot a few fleet-footed insects running for cover. They are bedbugs.
Obviously, the first thing you have to do is warn the hotel manager. If you are not satisfied that he or she is taking you seriously, move or / and ring the environmental health department of the local authority.
Whether you find bedbugs or not, they still may be about to snag a ride home with you, so spray or dust your suitcase with a powerful insecticide before you fly home and to be really safe, have your clothes boil washed, because bedbugs cannot endure temperatures above 45c.
If you cannot arrange this on the last day of your holiday, make certain you do it when you arrive home, but make sure that you do not give anything you have brought with you a chance to escape and multiply.
Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is currently concerned with bed bugs extermination. If you are interested in this, please go over to our website now at Picture Of Bed Bugs for further details.