Discussion:
bed bugs treatment
(too old to reply)
VFW
2010-08-26 17:35:55 UTC
Permalink
Diatomaceous Earth.
works on almost any crawling bug with an exoskeleton.
I would probably vacuum first then dust. avoid your eyes and breathing
the dust.
but D.E. has been eaten safely.
Works on the mechanical abrasion of the bug's exoskeleton. Non toxic
good luck.
--
--
Money! What a concept.
Bob
2010-10-18 05:28:24 UTC
Permalink
You would think that a cockroach would eat bedbugs, a cockroach is
much easier to live with rather than a constant persistent itch for a month.

I have seen cockroaches and lice/bedbugs, living together, in the
same room, and it seems that cockroaches like water a lot more than lice.

Sad but true, although I think a couple of cockroaches may handle a
small bedbug infestation, but I haven't tested that yet.

Bob


On Thu, 26 Aug 2010 10:35:55 -0700, VFW <***@toast.net> wrote:

|>Diatomaceous Earth.
|>works on almost any crawling bug with an exoskeleton.
|>I would probably vacuum first then dust. avoid your eyes and breathing
|>the dust.
|>but D.E. has been eaten safely.
|>Works on the mechanical abrasion of the bug's exoskeleton. Non toxic
|>good luck.
|>--
a***@gmail.com
2013-08-16 21:49:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by VFW
Diatomaceous Earth.
works on almost any crawling bug with an exoskeleton.
I would probably vacuum first then dust. avoid your eyes and breathing
the dust.
but D.E. has been eaten safely.
Works on the mechanical abrasion of the bug's exoskeleton. Non toxic
good luck.
--
--
Money! What a concept.
Hi,

Give it a try.

www.alpinepest.ca

or just call: 604-328-5337

Loading...