House mites (Glycyphagus domesticus) - Anyone else had them?
- AJM
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I don't think you're a freak and I sympathise with you.
The thing is: I (and maybe a lot of others) am at the moment convinced, that I'm not affected and want it to remain that way. So I don't want to start looking and - on the contrary - would like to forget everything about it.
The thing is: I (and maybe a lot of others) am at the moment convinced, that I'm not affected and want it to remain that way. So I don't want to start looking and - on the contrary - would like to forget everything about it.
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I came here to read about house mites, but the posts are missing. What happened?
I'm not sure about house mites, but I've got a severe problem with motherfucking cluster flies. I'd never even heard of the bastards before I moved to this place. They invade my house in fall and come out all winter long. I used to like winter because all insects were gone, but these are flies that only come out in winter! (sons of bitches!)
I'd rather have a house-warming party for house mites than be cursed with these fucking flies.
I'm not sure about house mites, but I've got a severe problem with motherfucking cluster flies. I'd never even heard of the bastards before I moved to this place. They invade my house in fall and come out all winter long. I used to like winter because all insects were gone, but these are flies that only come out in winter! (sons of bitches!)
I'd rather have a house-warming party for house mites than be cursed with these fucking flies.
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These aren't the regular green blowflies that live off rotting meat or piles of shit. No, these bastards don't eat anything. They just look for a warm spot to spend the winter. They can squeeze into little tiny gaps and work their way to the attic, then come down through any little microscopic opening into the living areas, then head for the nearest window to buzz around and generally fuck up my day.
(See, I don't feel bad about bitching - and I do want sympathy.)
(See, I don't feel bad about bitching - and I do want sympathy.)
- Wazrach
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Updated the post again to roughly what it was before.mr_a500 wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 01:17These aren't the regular green blowflies that live off rotting meat or piles of shit. No, these bastards don't eat anything. They just look for a warm spot to spend the winter. They can squeeze into little tiny gaps and work their way to the attic, then come down through any little microscopic opening into the living areas, then head for the nearest window to buzz around and generally fuck up my day.
(See, I don't feel bad about bitching - and I do want sympathy.)
I'm sorry that the blowflies are bothering you. I take it they never try to infest your foodstuffs? Just a general nuisance?
- Wazrach
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They don't go anywhere near my food, just to the windows or the brightest light source. At least that's one good thing. If these were the kind of flies that land on food, I'd go berserk, grab a machine gun and trash the place, sort of like this:
I definitely don't have those mites in my house. That must be annoying if they're going all over your dishes.
- XMIT
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We had these a while ago when a slice of bread went unnoticed in the back of the cupboard a while back. The answer was to pull everything out of the kitchen, toss away any unsealed food, and bleach everything daily until the mites were gone. Took about 10 days. Good luck.
- Wazrach
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Somewhat comforting to know somebody else is familiar with them. Chances are, if they were on a slice of bread, you also had them in your house but didn't know it. They eat pretty much everything. They can proliferate in areas with no food. My bedroom in the previous house had mites in the drawers of my bed. They love wires and electronics for some reason, although it's said it's because of the warmth they provide. The mites seem to start crawling out of drawers and cupboards in the colder months.XMIT wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 04:08We had these a while ago when a slice of bread went unnoticed in the back of the cupboard a while back. The answer was to pull everything out of the kitchen, toss away any unsealed food, and bleach everything daily until the mites were gone. Took about 10 days. Good luck.
I've moved a lot in ten years, and it appears that I've brought them with me with every move. The first house (my grandmother's house) was really, really dirty and damp and I remember seeing these mites frequently, even when not looking for them. Since they're so small, they pretty much anchor themselves to your house, getting into skirting boards and in cracks. That's why they're so hard to deal with.
I bet this wouldn't be such a problem if I was actually getting help with the situation. You know, like keeping open food out of the kitchen and being extremely careful with contamination. Cleaning is generally pointless - they just swarm the cupboards again after cleaning with bleach. I bet the only way to truly deal with it would be to starve them by removing EVERYTHING from the drawers and cupboards and storing them in a different room, while keeping humidity low. It's just a fucking carry-on.
- Chyros
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When I was a kid I lived in a street where at some point there was an infestation of pharaoh ants. They're very tiny and get absolutely EVERYWHERE, even in things with closed lids, like jam jars. There wasn't a meal we ate that didn't have ants in it, they even got into your drinks. The council had to fumigate the entire street, it was awful xD .
- Wazrach
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That must have been traumatising. First time I've heard of pharoah ants. How long did you have to stay out of the street after it was fumigated? Did you have to throw out your things?Chyros wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 11:31When I was a kid I lived in a street where at some point there was an infestation of pharaoh ants. They're very tiny and get absolutely EVERYWHERE, even in things with closed lids, like jam jars. There wasn't a meal we ate that didn't have ants in it, they even got into your drinks. The council had to fumigate the entire street, it was awful xD .
- Chyros
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Oh I was very little, I wasn't all THAT traumatised really xD . They're really tiny ants, much smaller than the ones you'll be used to - at some point you just accept that your peanut butter sandwich has at least half a dozen ants on it xD . I was much more afraid of spiders when I was a kid.Wazrach wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 12:05That must have been traumatising. First time I've heard of pharoah ants. How long did you have to stay out of the street after it was fumigated? Did you have to throw out your things?Chyros wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 11:31When I was a kid I lived in a street where at some point there was an infestation of pharaoh ants. They're very tiny and get absolutely EVERYWHERE, even in things with closed lids, like jam jars. There wasn't a meal we ate that didn't have ants in it, they even got into your drinks. The council had to fumigate the entire street, it was awful xD .
I can't remember how they got everything out tbh. I don't think we needed to throw anything out either. But it took them a week or something to clear the whole street.
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That is like free protein!Chyros wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 11:31When I was a kid I lived in a street where at some point there was an infestation of pharaoh ants. They're very tiny and get absolutely EVERYWHERE, even in things with closed lids, like jam jars. There wasn't a meal we ate that didn't have ants in it, they even got into your drinks. The council had to fumigate the entire street, it was awful xD .
You just wait till overpopulation gets even worse and we are all living in hive cities and you have to fight someone to the death for a tiny scrap of delicious rat meat! You will miss them ants and there free protein then!
- depletedvespene
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Nonsense. Soylent green is full of high-quality protein. Why would you want rat meat, dirty and hairy, in the first place?andrewjoy wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 15:12That is like free protein!Chyros wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 11:31When I was a kid I lived in a street where at some point there was an infestation of pharaoh ants. They're very tiny and get absolutely EVERYWHERE, even in things with closed lids, like jam jars. There wasn't a meal we ate that didn't have ants in it, they even got into your drinks. The council had to fumigate the entire street, it was awful xD .
You just wait till overpopulation gets even worse and we are all living in hive cities and you have to fight someone to the death for a tiny scrap of delicious rat meat! You will miss them ants and there free protein then!
(it's also baked in high-quality ovens, powered by the clean energy Vespene™ provides, but that's another issue)
- depletedvespene
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- swampangel
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I wonder, have you ever had a chance to investigate a friend's house for a similar presence?Wazrach wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 10:37I've moved a lot in ten years, and it appears that I've brought them with me with every move. The first house (my grandmother's house) was really, really dirty and damp and I remember seeing these mites frequently, even when not looking for them. Since they're so small, they pretty much anchor themselves to your house, getting into skirting boards and in cracks. That's why they're so hard to deal with.
And you said they can cause health problems, but do you think that you or your family are having health issues from them?
I don't ask to be contrary, but because I grew up in an old-but-basically-clean house and was raised with the idea that "bugs live here too". Of course you try to make things less hospitable for them -- I do have a dust mite allergy -- but that quote ^ makes me wonder if it's less about the actual effects of the mites now than the association with a prior, dirty house. You might go somewhere you think of as "clean" and find their pantry is equally mite-ridden.
That said, I'm a big fan of diatomaceous earth as a safe and inexpensive tool to discourage bugs from coming through cracks around doors/baseboards/etc. It's generally food-safe and pet-safe, although it's a fine powder so you want to avoid getting a lungful. But it would be an easy thing to use at the back of drawers and the threshold of your room.
- swampangel
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I haven't actually been allergy tested, but my mom had skin tests and reacted strongly to dust mites. It's heritable and I have the same kind of hayfever-like symptoms, so on balance of probabilities, I have the same allergy.Wazrach wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 18:51I don't believe we're having any health problems, as it's not quite an infestation yet. I don't need to look far for them, but it's not quite... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80Xi5a6PeVo
How did you find out you had a dust mite allergy? Do you still have them?
Bad for symptoms:
- houses with carpet or forced-air heat
- letting my house go too long without cleaning
- a musty-smelling room or bed is usually bad news
Good for symptoms:
- vacuuming often (I have a shop vac with a hepa filter cartridge, good for dog dander too)
- cleaning the walls and baseboards occasionally with a swiffer broom
- sunlight and airflow to reduce humidity
- an anti-allergen mattress cover
- mattress on slats and raised off the ground so air can circulate underneath
I live in an ~80 year old house (different from the one I grew up in); I'd be amazed if you could eliminate dust mites entirely in anything other than a modern apartment building. So it's just about damage control, trying to remove/discourage them from my main living spaces.
I would have said it's the opposite, the mites feed on the fungus, but maybe it goes both ways and mold develops on their dropping/bodies.Wazrach wrote: ↑16 Oct 2019, 18:51I actually put diatomaceous earth along the sides of some of the cupboards well over a year ago, but this didn't really stop them (in fact there's clearly some mold on it now). The mites cause mold growth in the least likely places, it seems. My mother had to throw out her juicer when we first discovered them in this house, as the cable was moldy and mites were crawling on it. Two tins of Nescafe Azera instant coffee had to be thrown out, as the coffee had turned into a shriveled, moldy island in the center of the tin, with a few mites in there. In a previous house, they turned the insides of a Quality Street tub moldy, even though there was nothing organic inside? Literally just coins and stuff. The inside was covered in mold dust and CRAWLING with mites. It makes no sense.
You don't live in an especially humid area like Vancouver/Seattle, do you?
- purdobol
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Make Room! Make Room! comes to mind.
Spoiler: