Categories: Uncategorized

It’s not pleasant but bed bugs are part of Maine life

There’s been a small uptick in bed bugs in Maine recently, but officials say it’s not nearly as bad as infestations were seven years ago. Still, residents are reminded to be on the lookout for the parasitic pest at home and away.

Earlier this month Hartford-Sumner Elementary School in Oxford County alerted parents that bed bugs were discovered in the school on two separate occasions. Since then, the school district has worked with a pest control company to eradicate the bugs in the building.

“We get one or two calls a year from schools where someone found [a bedbug] crawling some place or in a backpack,” said Jim Dill, pest management specialist with University of Maine Cooperative Extension. “It happens.”

Bed bugs are nothing new in Maine. There have been periods of infestations around the state including some of the worst in 2010 and in 2018.

“We are starting to see a little uptick in bed bugs now,” Dills said. “But it’s nothing like what it was six or seven years ago when it was really bad.”

Bed bugs are small, flat insects found all over the world. They feed exclusively on the blood of sleeping people and animals. They are less than one-quarter of an inch in size and are reddish brown in color.

“They have a piercing, sucking mouth part,” Dill said. “The adults feed once a week [and] once they have their blood meal, they are pretty happy for a while.”

After feeding, the bedbugs retreat into small hideouts — the seams of mattresses, box springs, bed frames, headboards, dresser tables, inside cracks or crevices, behind wallpaper or any other clutter or objects around a bed. They can also end up in clothing, suitcases, purses or other bags, which is how they can travel from place to place.

While sharing your sleeping space with a blood-sucking parasite bedmate is unsettling, Dill said it’s not a major health hazard.

“If there is anything good about them, it’s that they are not associated with any diseases,” he said.

That may be cold comfort to anyone who discovers one or more bed bug bites on their person.

A bed bug bite affects each person differently, according to the  US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Bite responses can range from an absence of any physical signs of the bite, to a small bite mark, to a serious allergic reaction that needs medical attention.

Because the adults feed so infrequently, Dill said anyone who wakes up with several or more bites probably has an infestation.

Those bite marks can take several days to show up and will look and feel like a mosquito bite.

Other indications you may have a bedbug infestation are the presence of the bugs in your mattresses or sheets, rusty-colored blood spots from bed bug excrement or a sweet-musty odor.

Nowhere is immune to infestation because bedbugs are found where there are people. Bed bug infestations can happen in apartments, shelters, rooming houses, hotels, cruise ships, buses, trains, and dorm rooms. They tend to live within eight feet of where people sleep.

That’s why it’s important to be especially vigilant when traveling, Dill said. With so many people hitting the road with travel that had been delayed due to the pandemic, he said it increases your odds of bringing home one or more bed bugs as an unwanted souvenir.

Anytime you check into a hotel room or cruise ship stateroom, Dill recommends first placing your bags on the suitcase rack or into the bathtub. Then fully inspect the bed and bedding for any of telltale signs of bedbugs.

“The kind of hotel does not matter,” Dill said. “It could be a five-star place and still have bed bugs.”

If you find them in your home, the only thing to do is to call in a professional pest control company that will use extreme heat to kill them.

“Most people here think of bed bugs as being dirty but other countries look at us like, ‘what’s your problem — they are just part of life,’” Dill said. “Yeah, so are mosquitos but I don’t like the idea of sitting there with 100 [mosquitos] feeding on me or the idea of this little blood sucker feeding on me while I sleep.”




Julia Bayly

Julia Bayly, staff writer for Hello Homestead, has worked in print journalism for more than three decades covering the unique characters and life of northern Maine. When not wrangling critters on her Rusty Metal Farm, Julia travels the world seeking adventure and great food wherever she can find it. She loves dogs and chickens, tolerates cats, is unsure of ducks and does not trust goats.

Share
Published by
Julia Bayly

Recent posts

This invasive Maine bug could devour your lawn this spring

An insect that looks like a mosquito on steroids is one of the state’s more innocuous pests — unless you really…

May 4, 2023 3:30 pm

Maine’s weather extremes are messing with plants

Recent wild temperature swings have wreaked havoc with plants’ dormancy cycles.

April 30, 2023 4:22 pm

More Maine dogs are testing positive for tick-borne diseases

Many dog owners in Maine have seen more ticks on their beloved furry friends, likely due to the growing prevalence…

April 28, 2023 4:26 pm

How to tell if turtles are nesting on your property

If you live near any freshwater or wetlands, there is a chance you'll end up having a turtle nesting on…

April 26, 2023 9:47 am

10 things you can do right now for your garden

Preparing the garden for the growing season is more than just buying seeds or cleaning out beds.

April 26, 2023 9:33 am

An iconic Maine tradition is being pushed further out of reach

In Maine, it's a way of life. But with the rising costs of land and living, running a homestead is…

April 24, 2023 10:15 am