We had bedbugs a year ago. We have been bite-free for about a year.
However, we have some items in quarantine (large thick ziplock bags) that we would like to bring out. They are mostly stuffed animals. Specifically, our friend’s blog has been on hiatus for some time.
So here’s the question. How do we reliably and safely remove the bedbugs from our stuffed animals? I will list some possible solutions with their pitfalls:
Keep them in quarantine. Pitfall: there is no proven upper bound on the life span of a bedbug in dormancy that I am aware of.
Freeze them. Pitfall: How can I be sure that our freezer is cold enough for long enough?
Heat them. Pitfall: Won’t it melt their eyes or their synthetic fur? Certainly the dryer is too rough, so we would use the oven. But then wouldn’t they smell like oven?
Also, note that random websites about bedbugs tend to disagree about various details, especially temps for freezing and life span in dormancy.
Yes, but many of these websites contradict each other about exactly how hot and for how long. Does anyone have any authoritative sources?
I don’t mean to be ungrateful, but this is not the kind of thing that we can try once, and then if it doesn’t work, try again. We need to be 100% sure that what we’ve done has killed the bedbugs. Otherwise, we try the method, bring out the items, and then go through 3 months of absolute hell if we’ve failed.
Surely that might affect their colour. Probably not a big deal for snowy owls and albino ferrets, but more of a problem for your run-of-the-mill teddy bears.
You might consider a technique for electronics and other difficult to deinfest items such. Hose down the inside of a cardboard box with bug spray of choice, and set the item in the box and seal it up. Leave for a few days. Wash gently to remove any pesticide residue.
I’ve never had to deal with bedbugs, so I can only imagine the anxiety of wanting to be totally rid of them.
Of course I don’t know the circumstances of your plush items, but if it were me…unless they have great sentimental value, I’d be chucking them out. I’m squicked out just by imagining them coming back into my home. (My squickiness comes from a one-time run in with roaches several years ago…shudder)
What about carefully undoing a seam, removing and throwing out the old stuffing, then giving the “skins” a pesticide or temperature-based treatment? It seems to me the greatest risk is leaving unhatched eggs in the animals’ guts. Wouldn’t it be best to restuff them with fresh, uncontaminated stuffing?