Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Boracare/Bora Care - Nothing is Better

I felt that I needed to tell people about an incredible product called Bora-Care. It is a termiticide, insecticide, and fungicide that is used on wood, plywood, logs, any cellulose product. The reason I bring this up is because of the increasing number of calls that I have received from people in the New Orleans area trying to re-build after hurricane Katrina. Their homes were virtually submerged in water, which of course has led to major fungus problems throughout the structures. Most of them have already done the research and know that Bora-Care is the product to use. But why?

When Bora-Care is applied to a wood surface, it literally penetrates deep down to the core of wood. If there is any fungus on the wood, it will neutralize it. If there are any wood destroying organisms in the wood eating it, such as carpenter ants, termites, powder post beetles, they will die. The best part is that once the wood is adequately treated, it stays in the wood indefinitely. That's right. . .Forever! Not only that, but it does not stain the wood or discolor it. Basically, if you ever have a chance to treat any wood part of your home; the studs, the siding, the floor boards, joists in a crawl space, attic space, I would treat it with Bora Care.

If its good enough to restore a proper living environment to hurricane victims, its good enough for me.

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Seminar on Bed Bugs: Dr. Michael F. Porter shares the latest

Bed Bugs are the hottest new topic in the pest control industry today. If you've failed to notice the bed bug news articles popping up like wildfire all over the country, then let me just say that Bed Bugs are coming back with a vengeance. They're infesting New York City, and the little devils have managed to hitchhike around the entire country, even the world as the latest article about Bed Bugs in Australia makes plain! Furthermore, every dwelling place is a target--from apartments to single-family homes to five star hotels.

It wasn't surprising that Bed Bugs were the focal point of the most recent Georgia Pest Control Association Conference held this past January in Athens, Georgia. Among the guest speakers was world-renowned etymologist Dr. Michael Porter from the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture. Dr. Porter's research on Bed Bugs is perhaps the most extensive and thorough on the Internet. It's no wonder that he was introduced to us as one of the top 25 most influential people in pest control!


SMALLER THAN "LIBERTY" ON A US PENNY

Dr. Porter
told us that before blood meals bed bugs are as flat as a pancake. They are very small in size. In fact, if you don't see them on a black background you may not see them at all. During the nymph stage a bed bug is so small that it is the height of the word Liberty on a US penny! s are much larger and much more visible, and the bed bug will appear larger in size when it is engorged with blood after a meal. However, I'm writing this here to emphasize the fact that careful inspection is a must. A typical Bed Bug will molt five times before becoming an , and therefore shed skins and eggs may be the only evidence you can find of their existence. The bed bug life cycle is egg-->nymph-->adult.


MORE THAN JUST BED DWELLERS


Bed Bugs normally congregate around the bed areas, particularly the mattress. This is where infestations usually begin, and from there they can spread from the bed to the bed frame and eventually to other parts of the dwelling space including tables, chairs, couches, etc. It is sometimes possible that an infestation could begin in a couch or spread from an infested couch brought into a home and then to the bedroom.

Bed Bugs have a tendency to aggregate in small areas along the tufts, folds and seams of a mattress. However, this behavior is not always consistent. In one inspection Dr. Porter discovered one or two bed bugs on the carpet, some in the ceiling of the room, and one on a picture frame! This is why we stress to be thorough in bed bug control, especially when you tackle the bed bug treatment on your own. You need to invest in a good magnifying glass and be very meticulous in your treatment. The scary fact that "they could be hiding anywhere" is never truer then in bed bug control.

Dr. Porter's team found that in many hotel infestations the Bed Bugs were found on the bed frame (especially the head board) because the bed sheets are jostled daily by the housekeeping staff. Spraying down only the mattress with insecticide and neglecting other harborage areas of the hotel room just won't solve the problem in this situation.


SUPER BED BUGS

Bed bugs are very resilient, which possibly explains how they are able to hitchhike all over the country in people's clothing, luggage, old couches and furniture etc. and go days and days without a blood meal. In fact, Dr. Porter suggests that they can live up to a year without a meal! While both very hot and very cold temperatures kill bed bugs, lowering the temperature of a home to solve your bed bug problem just won't do. Dr. Porter found bed bugs alive and well in a discarded mattress on the side of a road that had been there for days in very cold temperatures. Bed Bugs are certainly resilient creatures, but they are slow moving insects and contrary to some claims, they don't jump from place to place.


THOROUGHNESS - THE KEY TO CONTROL

If you failed to notice a theme in this article than let me say it again: The KEY to Bed Bug control is thoroughness. If you miss just one small area on a mattress, then your chances of reinfestation are very high. Our customers may think we are pushing some marketing gimmick when we insist that they buy enough bed bug products to do a complete treatment with at least 1-2 full follow-up treatments, but that's simply the only way to solve the problem. Here are some of Dr. Porter's Bed Bug treatment suggestions:

1. Don't rely on odors. Some people claim that bed bug infestations have a distinct smelly sweet odor, but this is not always the case.
2. Get a magnifying lens - at least 16x and wear gloves. It's better to search for the bed bugs in pairs (2 technicians). Be careful not to get the bed bugs on your clothing and accidentally carry them to other locations!
3. Placing glue boards around the room won't do much in testing for bed bug activity.
4. Check the box spring--the box spring is bed bug heaven. Check it and treat it well. If the box spring looks bad just throw it out, including the mattress. Wrap the boxspring and mattress in plastic before transporting them so bed bugs don't fall off in the house.
5. Vacuum up bed bugs, but know that they can be hard to dislodge from the mattress and furniture. Scraping them with some type of tool while sucking with the vacuum will help.
6. Using a Steamer is useful as the heat will kill the bugs. A lot of bed bugs will die when they come in contact with the steam, however steam cleaning furniture and mattresses with a wand attachment may blow some bed bugs away without killing them, complicating the infestation.
7. Inspect the bed frames and headboards carefully. This is ground zero for bed bugs.
8. Treat all infested areas including the mattress (especially the tufts, fold and seams), headboards, under furniture etc, along the baseboards of the room, behind switch plates on the walls etc.
8. Plan for 2-5 subsequent services/treatments.


BED BUG PRODUCTS


Insecticides with pyrethrins are effective against bed bugs. Specific laboratory tests have found that Demand CS, Drione Dust, Suspend SC, D-Force and Delta Dust all work well. Demand CS was found to kill the bugs faster than the other products (in about 30 minutes or less), but Suspend SC kills almost as fast as Demand and it is the only insecticide labeled for spraying directly on the mattress. That's why we recommend Suspend SC on our web site. Demand CS may be necessary in tougher commercial and hotel applications.

Do-It-Yourself Pest Control

I recently read an article about how pest control companies feel threatened by the ever growing market of Do-It-Yourself Pest Control Stores. It seems like everyday more and more companies are starting to realize that there is a market for the people that either do not want to pay the money or to deal with the service calls and companys technicians anymore.

Thanks to the internet, consumers can now buy the same products that they pay a company to use on their home. The EPA has restricted most products that have posed a threat in the past.

Today's products for the most part have no odor, are very safe around kids and pets, yet still just as effective as the "good stuff" in years past. The main difference that products are better is the chemical make-up, but the amazing thing is that they are just as good with less than 1% of active ingredient, compared to years ago where the active ingredient was 40%-50%. Very Strong!!! Too strong for the average homeowner.

Now that todays products are available to the homeowner, this industry is catching on like wildfire! I hear stories time and time again that people are just fed up with some service companies. There are not on time, they cost too much, and sometimes the service doesn't even work. The old story holds true: No one will care as much about your home as you will, no one will be as thorough to keep bugs out of your home as you will. Not to mention that you will save about 70% off of what you pay a company to do your own service.

As long as companys are out there doing half the service and work for the full price, i think this market is here to stay.