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Ant killer solutions! NB: We do not supply ant eaters!

Visit www.capy.co.uk for ant pest control solutions! Or call 01905 354549 or email help@capy.co.uk

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Bud bug pest solutions with Capybara! For help visit www.capy.co.uk or contact us via email help@capy.co.uk or 01905 354549

Cat Fleas, Dog Fleas, Capybara has the solution!

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Showing posts with label biting pest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biting pest. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Scientists create spermless mosquitoes in an effort to curb malaria.

Scientists create spermless mosquitoes in an effort to curb malaria.

By turning off the gene zpg, essential for normal sperm development, researchers from Imperial College London managed to sterilise the male mosquitoes whilst leaving them still attractive to females & robust enough compete in the vigorous mating that the species take part in. Females mate once in a lifetime & it hoped they can be fooled into mating with a sterile male & lay unfertilized eggs in a bid to reduce the size of mosquito populations.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

£1600 out of court settlement. Hotels need preventative measures, not cure.

Sisters bitten so many times by bed bugs in London hotel they needed hospital treatment



By Richard Hartley-parkinson
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2027312/Airways-Hotel-Sisters-bitten-100-times-bed-bugs-needed-hospital-treatment.html

Last updated at 12:56 PM on 18th August 2011





The two sisters were bitten more than 100 times by bed bugs
The two sisters were bitten more than 100 times by bed bugs

Two sisters had to go to hospital to be treated for 100 bed bug bites after staying at a hotel in Central London.


Melanie Carmen and Joy McDonagh were staying at the Airways Hotel in Pimlico when they were bitten by the creatures.


Mrs Carmen suffered from 86 bites while her sister had been bitten more than 30 times.


The pair, both in their forties, had to be taken to Queen Mary's Hospital in Bexley, South-East London, to be given antibiotics and anti-histamines after suffering from swelling and nausea brought on by the bugs.


Mrs Carmen, from Deal, Kent, said: 'The bites were extremely painful. We were left suffering from deep aches, itching and other flu-like symptoms, and it took months for the bites to disappear.

'It makes it worse knowing it isn't just us who have suffered because of the appalling conditions at the hotel.'

After her hospital treatment last summer, Mrs McDonagh had to go and see her GP, according to the Daily Telegraph, a month after staying at the hotel.


The pair have been given £1,600 in compensation in an out-of-court settlement.


Bed bugs fact file

The sisters' solicitor, Katy Bailey, said: 'Sadly it appears that their experience was not isolated and a number of other guests have also complained about problems with hygiene and particularly bed bugs.'

On TripAdvisor, the Airways Hotel has 412 reviews and only 16 of which say the hotel is 'excellent' compared with 146 people who rated it as terrible.

It describes itself as a 'budget hotel', but the cheapest available single room is £90 and doubles go from £130.

The latest review on the hotel is titled 'We hated it & would never recommend it!'.

The person who left the review, named as Joseph and says he is from Florida, said that 'breakfast wasn't worth the effort', the dining room was too small, the beds were uncomfortable because springs were visibly broken.

He added: 'The bed spreads looked as if they had not been cleaned in ages. We were told they change sheets every other day but it is more like every 3rd day.'

Another user of the website, zanardinia, wrote: 'On arrival we thought (the hotel) looked slightly worn, but clean and the banisters were newly painted, so refurbishment was obvioulsy in progress.

'However, in the first five minutes we discovered one bedbug crawling around the shower, and empty molts on the pillows. We left precisely one minute later.'

A spokesman for the hotel said that it had a contract with pest control experts and 'as soon as we have a problem, and other hotels have the same problem, they are dealt with.'

He denied the hotel had an infestation and that with the hotel's high occupancy rate the bed bugs arrived with people's luggage and hatched once they had gone.

With regards to the negative feedback he said that people who had a good experience were less likely to comment on their stay.

He said: 'It's not an honest opinion, some of them are an exaggeration.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2027312/Airways-Hotel-Sisters-bitten-100-times-bed-bugs-needed-hospital-treatment.html#ixzz1WV8T4ljM

Friday, June 17, 2011

Bed Bugs TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE: MYTH OR FACT?

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE: MYTH OR FACT?

MYTH: Bedbugs are a thing of the past.
FACT: Bedbugs came into America with the early settlers and were common in Colonial times.
In the past decade, bedbugs have been found in every state in America, and are becoming a major problem in big cities and small towns across the country.

MYTH: Bedbugs only live in filthy homes.
FACT: Bedbugs have been found in every type of dwelling, from five-star hotels, apartment buildings and college dorms to single-family homes and everywhere in between. They are more interested in places to hide where humans are present than in unsanitary conditions.
MYTH: I'll only get bedbugs if I travel in the Third World.
FACT: While international travel may increase your risk of transporting bedbugs, they regularly hitchhike from hotels that are closer to home. Hotels and motels can be bedbug havens because of the fresh crop of people each night and the opportunity to climb aboard luggage.

MYTH: Bedbugs only live in the bedroom.
FACT: While the bedroom is a great place for nocturnal insects like bedbugs, as infestations become more severe, bedbugs will move into furniture, fabrics, wall crevices and flooring cracks throughout your home.
A licensed pest management professional will carefully inspect your entire dwelling for signs of infestations while making a treatment plan.

MYTH: I can get rid of bedbugs by leaving my house empty for a few weeks.
FACT: Adult bedbugs can live as long as 12 months without a meal, so a long vacation won't provide you with relief. The only way to deal with the problem is to treat it directly and monitor results over the long haul.
A licensed pest management professional will help you eliminate bedbugs from your home.
MYTH: Bedbugs are so embarrassing that I should never tell anyone that I had a problem.
FACT: Having a bedbug infestation in your home can cause emotional stress. If you need help, seek help. But keeping an infestation secret from your friends and neighbors can lead to further spread, especially in apartment buildings, dormitories and other multi-unit living arrangements.
Keep in mind you didn't go out and purposely bring bedbugs home. They are insects of opportunity, and they found you or your personal belongings and came home with you. In many cases it's friends, relatives, workers etc., who may bring bedbugs into a home ... not always the homeowner.
To stop the spread, consider telling your landlord, school housing administration or building manager, and have them get in touch with a pest management professional right away. Keep in mind that if you try to get rid of them yourself and choose the wrong product you could chase or move the bugs to adjoining apartments or living areas.
Do-it-yourself efforts often make matters worse and can lead to further spread of an infestation. Professionals use a variety of products in well-thought-out strategies to gain control.
Source: The Bedbug Institute; www.bedbuginstitute.com


Friday, June 10, 2011

The Star: Mum in Please fior Action on Fleas

Published on Sunday 5 June 2011 14:09

A TEENAGE single mum has told how moving into her first property turned into a nightmare - because the house was infested with fleas.

Kelsey Scrivens, aged 19, who has a two-year-old son, Coby, moved into the two-bedroom semi-detached house, in Clara Place, Kimberworth, at the end of March and spent almost £1,000 on new flooring and equipment such as a fridge and cooker.
But she said that within weeks, she noticed she and her son were being bitten.
She said: “We were getting bites on our arms and legs.
“The house was clean and tidy when we moved in, so I don’t know where the fleas were living.
“When I complained to the landlord, South Yorkshire Housing Association, they said I must have a pet, but I don’t.”
South Yorkshire Housing Association sent workmen around to fumigate the house at the beginning of May, but Kelsey said the fleas returned so she decided she could no longer stay.
She said: “I wanted the house because I had been living at my mum’s and wanted more space - but it’s turned into a nightmare, so I’m back at my mum’s.
“I can’t move back until the fleas are gone because it’s not a good place for my son.”
Kelsey’s mum, Marie Darnley, said: “Within weeks of moving in, my daughter and grandson had been bitten all over. The workman who came round to fumigate the house told us they could have been dormant in one of the cupboards or floorboards and reappeared due to bodyheat when people were back at the house.”
South Yorkshire Housing Association said it would arrange for the house to be fumigated for a second time.
Sharron Dyett, its housing services manager, said: “Miss Scrivens moved into this property on March 28.
“After she had been there for over six weeks her mother reported there were fleas in her home.
“The property was clean when she moved in and it wasn’t clear how the infestation had happened but as a goodwill gesture we arranged to fumigate the property.
“On June 1, after a further three weeks, Miss Scrivens’ mother reported that the property was infested with fleas again.
“We do not know how the reinfestation has occurred but we have arranged a further fumigation.”

http://www.thestar.co.uk/news/local/mum_in_plea_for_action_on_fleas_1_3451766

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