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Bed Bugs And How They Have Been Eradicated Throughout History Options · View
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#1 Posted : Sunday, March 13, 2011 4:24:16 PM Quote

In a dark and lonely cave, somewhere deep in the deserts of the Middle East, where only bat and man lived, thus came forth the bed bug. This is the origin story of the infamous insect that loves to feast on blood, both of man and beast. There are indications that bed bugs hung around the homes of Grecians long about 400 B.C., because Aristotle talks about them. They are listed in the book Pliny's Natural History, published for the first time around 77 AD in Rome. In this book, bed bugs are talked about for medicinal qualities for the first time, mentioning their effectiveness in combating ear infections and snake bites, among other ailments. This idea stuck around all through the Dark and Middle Ages, up through the 18th century. At around this time, Guettard thought hysteria could be treated using bed bugs. In Germany, bed bugs make their debut during the 11th century. France spotted them in their chateaus two centuries later, and jolly old England started putting up with their nuisance in 1583. But bed bugs didn't show themselves much in England until nearly a hundred years later. It was thought that bed bugs journeyed to England with the lumber supplies being shipped in to rebuild London after the massive fire of 1666 that practically wiped the city from existence. In what is now known as Slovenia, it was noted by Giovanni Antonio Scopoli that bed bugs were around in the 18th century.

It used to be that various plants, insects and fungi were the way to go in trying to kill or at least get rid of a bed bug infestation. As late as the mid-19th century, they were smoked out of homes using peat fires. Then came dust, in particular diatomaceous earth, lime and plant ash.

Panels made from basket-weaving material were laid around beds in France and the UK during the 19th century. Every morning, they were taken out like carpets and shaken clean. Plants with microscopic hairs in a hooklike shape were set up around beds during the night, then swept and burned come morning. This was a popular remedy for bed bug infestations in Rhodesia and the Balkans.

Until the mid-1900s, bed bugs were everywhere. In 1933 there were numerous housing sectors in the UK that all had infestations. Whole neighborhoods. In World War II the problem was so great that General MacArthur was noted as saying that bed bugs were the "greatest nuisance insect problem" at U.S. military bases within the United States.

The 1940s brought DDT as a potent form of pesticide control. With it, bed bugs went bye-bye until around 1995. The reasons for this is not really known, although laziness, bed bug resistance to known pesticides and the increased popularity and accessibility of travel abroad are common citations of the problem.

The easiest way to kill Bed Bugs is to use the proper treatments that actually work, I realize this is a problem that requires urgent attention so if you want to get rid of your bed bugs visit: http://www.BugBedTreatment.com


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