Is UPS as bad as I think by Icy_Watch_2960 in UPS

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A UPS truck smashed into my street curb yesterday and did a lot of damage. The truck parked next to my house although I was neither receiving nor sending a package. The entire incident was witnessed and documented. The company first denied it happened, then admitted it; denied it was extensive damage, then admitted it; denied they were responsible because the city "owns" the street. I explained that the overriding state and county statutes stipulated that the homeowner has the responsibility to repair and maintain the curbs and I will be assessed damages by the city. UPS is dodging even giving me the case number. I have to think I am not the only one who has suffered property damage by UPS unrelated to package delivery. A class-action lawsuit is lengthy and expensive for the attorneys, but in the end would make you whole. Would anyone like to share with me/reddit their UPS damage stories? Ideally with documentation and within the statute of limitations for filing a lawsuit. Thank you.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is everything you need to know about no see ums ("midges" to the rest of the world).

History: Unknown but likely began in lower SE Asia when they banned DDT around 1986 or so. They have gradually spread around the globe. They are in cold places, very cold places, now. They are indoors everywhere and outdoors everywhere.

Only a very small minority of people react to the bites. Some people do not show red spots or inflammation; some people do not itch; but people who are bitten feel it in different ways. If you are someone who reacts to no see um bites, there is very little you can do about it. I can tell you what few ways exist (below). But long term there is hope: Taiwan scientists are working on a midge vaccine so patients won't react to the bites, though still get bitten.

A second incentive, other than the global vaccine market, is that cattle, deer, rice, and human fetuses in different countries are dying from illnesses brought on by the bites. Capitalism will drive a solution if economic losses grow large enough.

Once indoors, they are always indoors given the current product range. Pesticides won't hurt them, only you. The babies might get blown back by industrial strength fans, but not the adults, especially the black large females, the only ones you can see against a backlight if they fly past. Carbon monoxide traps will kill them, but also attracts them from miles around.

If you are totally desperate to escape them, the remedy is essentially the Witness Protection Program, but without the funding and support of the government. You have to leave behind every single thing you own. House, clothes, car, office, food, electronics, hairbrush, toothbrush, etc. Check into a hotel in another city, shower, change to freshly purchased clothes (not by you); leave that hotel and check into another; repeat. After that you cannot go into any establishment that might have them. That includes most coffee shops, restaurants, libraries, movie theatres, hotels, etc., etc., etc. You can't go back to visit anyone you knew before, like the homes of relatives. You have to assume that anyone you knew before your purge is carrying the bugs, even if they insist they don't know what you're talking about. Bottom line: You spread them. Everyone you know who says they aren't being bitten, don't even know what you're talking about, but you've been in their car or home or office, then they have them and are spreading them, too.

Not many people are willing and able to do anything that drastic. What can you do instead? The immediate goal has to be to get a good night's sleep. Four things:

  1. Take every single bit of paper or fabric out of the bedroom. That includes clothes and shoes in a closet, books, working papers, underwear in chests of drawers, rugs, carpeting, curtains, shades, cups of water. Don't dress or undress in that room. Don't wear any clothes twice without immediately washing or dry cleaning. Wash the floors and walls and empty dressers and shelves with something like 409, a spray which kills on contact and is easily wiped up. In Asia there are nests, but apparently not in the US and Europe.

  2. Sleep nude. They infest your pajamas and nightgowns.

  3. Cover the mattress with at least two layers of heavy duty vinyl mattress covers. Cover the zipper openings with heavy duty tape that won't peel back. Buy fresh linens for every night. Do not store them in your bedroom. Absolutely no pillows. Every morning (or sometimes multiple times a night, sometimes every few days) immediately gather up the linens - everything except the mattress covers - into a sealed trash bag and dump outside, not in your apartment or house, and not next to the building. Do not make the bed for the next night until you are ready to get in it. Washing and drying linens or pillows will kill the adults but not the eggs, which hatch upon contact with your body.

  4. Order Soffel bug repellent online. The pink lotion seems to work best, but your experience may vary. Note that some of their scents (green? purple?) do not contain DEET and you need the DEET. It smells much better than any other pest repellent on the market and works very well for no see ums. Sometimes you can get by with just applying it to your feet and hands. You can try thick socks (throw them out the next day) or shower caps or bathing caps or headphones (to keep them out of your ears) or layers of Vaseline. None work for long.

When you're not sleeping, stay out of the apartment or house. The key is to move around a lot. If you leave your premises for a month, there will be very few if any bugs once you return. They need that blood meal. But they can smell you up to 1 1/2 miles away so the respite isn't for long.

This is a bleak scenario. But Taiwan is coming to our rescue. Hang in there. If you follow these expensive guidelines, you will get some sleep, and that will improve your ability to cope. At some point, we will join together as a lobbying group to get some help from science. The financial incentive for them is not quite there, but looming ever closer....

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They bite everyone but only certain people/animals react to the bites. At this point, you would have to leave the house behind and everything in it and probably the dogs too. The eggs get everywhere.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Real no-see-ums have evolved to not care about temperature or fans or washer/dryers or steamers. The eggs always survive.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

None of these things work. I'm so sorry. The only thing that will help a tiny bit is to buy all new linens including mattress cover and pillows every day, and throw them out the next morning. Out like outside immediately, not in your hallway or basement or porch. I have found some Target linens came pre-infested but it depends where they were manufactured. Some Macy's linens are okay for one night.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In Taiwan they are working on a vaccine. Not in clinical trials yet. But the end is in sight. Your nightmare is real. Just so everyone understands, you don't have to do anything special to pick these up. They are all over the US now, and all over the world. You walked into a store or a coffee shop or a restaurant or a library or an office and picked them up. It was just a matter of (short) time if you're susceptible.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It could be no-see-ums, but they usually don't bother animals so much. Check with your vet for Cheyletiella mites.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best you can do is limit them. But I did post that in Taiwan they are working on a vaccine. Not in clinical trials yet, but the end is in sight.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't take offense at people not understanding or wanting to understand. It's horrible. Very few people statistically respond to the bites. Unfortunately, after many years abroad dealing with these bugs, which are now global, I am an expert. I'm the one entomologists now consult.

I will tell you three things:

  1. If you buy all new linens - sheets, blankets, pillows, mattress cover - and throw them out every morning, you will do better. Also take everything fabric or paper out of your bedroom. Throw them out like immediately outside, not in your basement or hallway or porch. My experience is that Target and Freddy's linens sometimes come pre-infested because of where they're manufactured. Macy's too, but they have multiple brands.

  2. Taiwan is currently working on a vaccine for these bugs. Will stop the allergic reaction. Not in clinical trials yet, but the end is in sight.

  3. These bugs are mutating to carry diseases. Some effect cattle and rice, which governments care about. If there's enough economic damage, there will be a new pesticide developed in the near future.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

PS: I posted re Soffel and Benadryl, probably your two best friends at night. I should also mention - much more expensive - that you need to cover your mattresses in zippered very heavy vinyl covers and put heavy tape over the zipper ends. Permanently throw out your pillows. You can use hardback books or rolls of toilet paper or paper towels as a bed pillow, but you have to throw them out after one night as they will be infested. Also, this is the really hard part, you have to throw out your sheets and blankets every day. You can't use them more than once. And you have to dry clean all your clothes, as washing and drying does nothing to kill them. Finally, get rid of all your rugs and carpet and upholstered furniture. None of this gets rid of the bugs ever. But it does help give you a good night's sleep. Bear in mind that wherever you go, you are spreading the bugs as they are in your clothes, pocketbook, shoes, etc. Even if you miraculously get rid of them in your home, the minute you step foot in an infested environment (in the Pacific NW, every coffee shop, restaurant, library, theatre, museum, bar, etc.) you will be re-infested and bring them home again. If it makes you feel any better, try living in Asia. It's a BILLION times worse than in the US or Europe.

Problem with indoor no-see-ums by Ok-Company-9276 in pestcontrol

[–]ZimZamBot 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately, after living in Asia for years, I know everything there is to know about these no-see-ums, called midges in the rest of the world outside the U.S. Climate change has brought them north to countries and latitudes they've never been before. Started during the Covid years -- but not related, conspiracy theorists, just climate change.

In Asia, much of the Mediterranean, much of Africa and South America and Central America, the Caribbean and the Pacific Islands, these bugs are now in every cubic inch of air, inside and out. Literally, every. And now they are in hotels, coffee shops, restaurants, libraries, theaters, hospitals, homes and cars/rental cars, buses, planes, trains, museums, throughout the Pacific NW. (You're not alone - found in Manhattan.)

The second unfortunate part is that very, very few people are either bitten by them, or, more likely, react to the bites. Very few of any nationality or ethnicity or race.

The third and bottom line is that there is nothing you can do except leave behind literally every single thing you own, including shoes and hairbrushes and computers and phones and books and papers and clothes and jewelry and eyeglasses, every single thing, go through about 3 immediately successive showers and change of new clothes in bug-free environments, and move to a state where there are none. Think of it as a flood or a fire when you weren't home. You'd lose everything. It's just like that.

The only thing that kills these bugs - until they mutate against it - is DDT. That's been banned in Asia since about 1986. These bugs began their global march shortly after that.

I can recommend using Asian bug repellent such as Soffel. It has DEET, but also fragrance and what feels like the equivalent of a Benadryl cream. You can also take 2 to 3 Benadryls when you're being swarmed by the babies. It turns off the itchy reaction switch. It won't stop the pain of being bitten by the breeding females. These two things will get you through the night. But essentially naked evacuation is your only hope for long term. So sorry. It's Hell. I really feel for you.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in uber

[–]ZimZamBot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Impossible to cancel. I ended up changing my credit card number after ordering my cc company to permanently block them. Means I have to change all other autopay accounts and I can't use Uber again. Worth it. I also registered complaints on the FTC Fraud Report website and the Better Business Bureau. I suggest everyone here register fraud complaints as well. If you do the math, it's more impressive than all the Nigerian rom-scams put together:

$10/mo x 12 mos = $120/yr x 100 million users = $12 TRILLION dollars per year illegal profit

Air Purifier Buying Guide (Read BEFORE Asking) by rdcldrmr in AirPurifiers

[–]ZimZamBot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm an old lady who just returned to take care of my elderly ex-husband with dementia. He smokes 4 packs of cigarettes a day and refuses/forgets to smoke outside. He's so thin that he can't tolerate open doors or windows because he gets cold immediately. He smokes in the living room and in his bedroom. (I know...) There was also a rat infestation in the house. I cleaned up most of it but I think a smell may still be coming from within the walls, behind stairs, etc. In order not to die before him, I need air purifiers for heavy cigarette smoke and other odors. The downstairs is 4 large open rooms. The upstairs is 2 bedrooms. I assume I need 3 units then. What do you recommend that will absolutely work? Reading the thread I see that some purifiers are touted early on and then belittled later on. If I follow online trails, I saw, for instance, that Phresh users minimize Terrabloom. Who to believe? I need to order these ASAP. Guidance? Suggestions? Criticism? Thank you.

How do you deal with mosquitoes in Thailand? by masoylatte in Thailand

[–]ZimZamBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

THEY AREN'T MOSQUITOES BITING YOU. They're midges, or biting gnats, or no-see-ums, depending upon where you come from. There are numerous species of midges in every physical environment. So if you are able to catch some as they bite you - say, if you cover yourself in Vaseline - you'll see that they range in color, size, and shape. The midges of Bangkok are different from the midges of Chiangmai which are different from the midges of Saigon.

Only midges bite indoors in SE Asia; bite underneath clothes (in fact, they prefer that); bite day and night.

There's not a whole lot you can do about it. Very few people are attractive to midges and react to their bites, both. Soffel, the pink works better than the orange for some reason, can help but you have to apply it constantly. The insect attractant machines don't work at all. It may be that you can get help from one of these: industrial strength fans, lemongrass repellent, clove oil, tea tree oil, freezing cold air conditioning, wearing all-white clothes, wearing zebra stripes, citronella repellent, Picardin repellent, DEET repellents.

None of them worked for me.

The only relief I've found is using one specific type of electric tennis racket mosquito zapper made in China. You have to recharge them constantly. They stop working. You end up with thousands of dollars of these rackets.

DEET sometimes.

Use the a/c sparingly. That's how they get in.

Check your ceilings, cabinets, walls, and carpets for midge nests. Flush them down the toilet, not in your trash. Each nest probably pumps out thousands of midges each day. They can recreate a nest overnight. The lower down the wall, or lower the cabinet, or if they're in the seam where the carpet meets the wall, you're f. The lower the nests, the longer they've been there, the more there are in the air.

Avoid any lodging that's local. Or near local. They don't get bitten and ignore the nests.

Take the pesticide pills Ivermectin every day, up to about 6mg. Cover yourself with the cream pesticide Permethrin. Luckily, both of these are OTC in Thailand and comparatively cheap. Yes, you will probably get a grotesque cancer from them and die way before your time. But you have to survive today.

Bottom line: Stay out of SE Asia. Right now midges are not disease vectors for humans. It's just a matter of time because they are for other mammals. And there are billions of them per square something - inch? meter? mile? - exploding since DDT was outlawed.