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  • Aug 24, 2006, 09:16 AM
    Transformed
    Insects / Parasites in Clothing!
    HELP!! Does anyone know what this is? Can you help me research this pest?

    I've been searching the internet and writing people for several weeks. Yet I haven't been able to find information on this pest. So it must be something new.

    People are contracting a tiny white insect, arthropod, or parasite from clothing of retail stores or other people. This pest is neither a mite nor a flea. It's not lice. It looks like fiber or thread. Yet it's not affiliated with Morgellons or Fibre Disease.

    Please pay close attention as I describe the physical attributes and symptoms of this pest. If someone has this pest, they will see 3 types of White things:

    1) tiny round things about the size of a spec of salt; some are a little larger
    2) tiny, oblong shaped, things that look like a piece of thread or fiber; varies in length from 1/16 to 1/8 of an inch long (It grows.) **It unfolds itself to fly. It crawls also.
    3) slightly larger round white things that jump.
    I see #1 and #2 most often.

    If someone has this pest, they will have the following physical symptoms:
    1) Bites that sting
    2) Red skin rashes and/or small red bumps
    3) Lighting sensations; Victims will feel the pest or its eggs lighting on their skin.
    4) Optional: Itching **I don’t itch, but another victim has an itching problem.

    Entomologists, Health Departments, medical doctors, and pest control companies aren’t familiar with this pest. Some professionals will claim there’s no such thing. Therefore, it's difficult for pest victims to get help. **This pest is not related to Morgellon/Fibre Disease.

    If you have any information on this pest or if you know anyone who is infested with it, please write me at: twfparasite(at)yahoo(dot)com (Use the “at” symbol and period.)

    Thanks for your time and assistance.
  • Apr 12, 2007, 08:36 AM
    caadev
    Please help!! I've had this problem for months! Two exterminators did not believe me, said it was lint. Ammonia seems to get rid of them. We can't be having the same hallucinations.
  • Nov 21, 2007, 01:47 AM
    gnahcd
    A thread-like organism that flies? If it doesn't have wings, it isn't likely to fly. It might be able to "float" on the wind, but not actively fly. http://www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/ent...tpdf/ent58.pdf
  • Nov 23, 2007, 03:29 PM
    ec64
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Transformed
    HELP!!! Does anyone know what this is? Can you help me research this pest?

    I've been searching the internet and writing people for several weeks. Yet I haven't been able to find information on this pest. So it must be something new.

    People are contracting a tiny white insect, arthropod, or parasite from clothing of retail stores or other people. This pest is neither a mite nor a flea. It's not lice. It looks like fiber or thread. Yet it's not affiliated with Morgellons or Fibre Disease.

    Please pay close attention as I describe the physical attributes and symptoms of this pest. If someone has this pest, they will see 3 types of White things:

    1) tiny round things about the size of a spec of salt; some are a little larger
    2) tiny, oblong shaped, things that look like a piece of thread or fiber; varies in length from 1/16 to 1/8 of an inch long (It grows.) **It unfolds itself to fly. It crawls also.
    3) slightly larger round white things that jump.
    I see #1 and #2 most often.

    If someone has this pest, they will have the following physical symptoms:
    1) Bites that sting
    2) Red skin rashes and/or small red bumps
    3) Lighting sensations; Victims will feel the pest or its eggs lighting on their skin.
    4) Optional: Itching **I don’t itch, but another victim has an itching problem.

    Entomologists, Health Departments, medical doctors, and pest control companies aren’t familiar with this pest. Some professionals will claim there’s no such thing. Therefore, it's difficult for pest victims to get help. **This pest is not related to Morgellon/Fibre Disease.

    If you have any information on this pest or if you know anyone who is infested with it, please write me at: twfparasite(at)yahoo(dot)com (Use the “at” symbol and period.)

    Thanks for your time and assistance.

    My 4 year old wore some new jeans out of the packet last weekend.All week she has had a rash that starts with red blotches,then they turn a purplish pink and are raised slightly,rather like bruises to look at,then they turn into small red spots.They don't irritate or itch.The rash starts where the leg of her underwear is and finishes at the top of where her socks would be.My local pharmacist is mystified and just said they resembled bites but were too localised as only the thigh to ankle area was affected.Could this be this parasite that can live in fabric?
  • Jul 27, 2008, 04:46 PM
    blu130
    I have been tortured by this unknown pest for the last 3 years. What is it? I have been bombing my apartment for fleas every couple of months because I thought I had flea bites. I took my cats to the vet and my cat didn't have fleas. I felt and still feel the bites and crawling sensations on my skin and I usually pull off tiny spes of round things (like specs of salt), but sometimes they are small, round and black. They usually leave bites that look like I was scratched(which eventually turn into a dark mark) or leave mosquito -like bites that itch. I contacted an exterminator and told him some insect is biting me, mostly at night and I cannot sleep. I showed the exterminator the samples I had collected of what I thought was biting me. He stated "It wasn't an insect, just probably dirt". Sometimes I find these unknown pests in my bed, clothing and on my skin. There are times when I wear certain clothing, I feel biting sensations on my legs, arms and back and when I remove my clothing and turn it inside out, I sometimes see a
    Thread-like white substance or white specs. The doctors don't believe me. They have replied its probably in my mind. If that's the case, why do have rashes on both arms, and mosquito-like itchy bites on my waist, legs and thighs. So far, I had 3 different pest control companies inspect my apt. But they want to spray for bedbugs. However they see no evidence of bedbugs in my apt. Does anyone know how to get rid of this unknown pest? I haven't had a good night of sleep in a while!
  • Aug 19, 2008, 01:29 PM
    JudyKayTee
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by WWashington
    :confused: What kills this tiny white parasite that has invaded me and my home, and will I get sick or finally die from their stings? No one believes that they exists, they say its all in my mind because they don't look like regular bugs.


    I answered one of your other posts on this subject -
  • Nov 25, 2008, 11:51 AM
    findit

    I have had the same problem. There is some kind of flying mite like a midge that has invaded my home and car. I am about to lose my mind trying to get rid of it and tired of washing everything. Gets in clothes, they land and nest in drawers of clothes. I can wash clothes and they will be clean then look a few days later and unfold clothes and find these tiny white specs of bugs on the clothes. There must be something being imported from manufacturer shipping in products. Only thing I can say is that thank god I found this site and that this is not just an isolated problem for me. Doctors and pest control has told me there is nothing, then why do I have bite marks and small welts?
  • Nov 25, 2008, 03:51 PM
    zjivka
    Try
    Thysanoptera.

    :)
  • Nov 29, 2008, 04:16 PM
    msimmune

    They hate salt, peroxide, baking soda and clorox. To control the symptoms try high doses of vitamin c , b12, b6, alfalfa tablets. Makec sure you put borax in your wash. DON'T PUT YOUR LAPTOP ON YOUR BED. WEAR GLOVES WHEN YOU WASH YOUR HAIR OR IT WILL GET ON YOUR SCALP. YOU'RE IN THE EARLY STAGES OF THE MONSTER!
  • Nov 29, 2008, 04:41 PM
    JudyKayTee
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by msimmune View Post
    They hate salt, peroxide, baking soda and clorox. To control the symptoms try high doses of vitamin c , b12, b6, alfalfa tablets. Makec sure you put borax in your wash. DON'T PUT YOUR LAPTOP ON YOUR BED. WEAR GLOVES WHEN YOU WASH YOUR HAIR OR IT WILL GET ON YOUR SCALP. YOU'RE IN THE EARLY STAGES OF THE MONSTER!


    Can't they simply walk up your body to your scalp if that's where they want to be?
  • Jan 4, 2009, 04:32 PM
    nuitgoddess
    Help. I have the same problem and have had no relief. Please email me if you have found a solution. I have tried at least 1 products and solutions, both natural and poisons. Please somebody help. nuitgoddessATyahooDOTcom
  • Jan 4, 2009, 06:51 PM
    asking

    Your description seems odd. Why should there be so many different forms?
    An oval, a thread that unfolds to fly, and still another than is larger and jumps?
    Parasites tend to be very simple animals.

    If this is real, please post a url for a photo that is detailed enough to be recognizable as an arthropod. If you can see this much detail, then you should be able to take a photograph.

    Thanks.
  • Jan 4, 2009, 06:55 PM
    asking
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by ec64 View Post
    My 4 year old wore some new jeans out of the packet last weekend.All week she has had a rash that starts with red blotches,then they turn a purplish pink and are raised slightly,rather like bruises to look at,then they turn into small red spots.They dont irritate or itch.The rash starts where the leg of her underwear is and finishes at the top of where her socks would be.My local pharmacist is mystified and just said they resembled bites but were too localised as only the thigh to ankle area was affected.Could this be this parasite that can live in fabric?

    This is much more likely to be a reaction to some chemical in the pants you bought. I hope you have washed them by now. And if that did not help, thrown them out. It is UNlikely to be an insect.

    New clothes are often treated with stiffeners to make them look "new." Wash before wearing. Same for any new dishes, which also may not be clean.
  • Jan 4, 2009, 07:04 PM
    asking

    I think the problem here may be excessive cleaning and chemical products which dries the skin, causing it to flake--small white objects. Dry skin is easily irritated by fabrics whose fibers pull at the skin.

    If the pest guy can't find any pests in the house and doctor can't find any parasites, that's a pretty strong indication that it's something else. In any case, a few parasites are actually good for us. Read the book "Riddled with Life" by Marlene Zuk to learn how parasites can prevent asthma, allergies, Crohn's disease, etc.

    Scratching at night could cause slight scabbing, which would look like tiny black pellets as described. Our houses are normally FILLED with particles and threads.

    If perhaps you have some mild fungal or bacterial infection, the best solution is not more bleach and strong chemicals but to rebalance the natural flora that live on our skin. They are supposed to be there. Hold a child who has been playing in the dirt, or go out and lie in a grassy field in a nearby state park. Stop trying to run away from germs.

    Mice raised with zero germs don't develop their organs properly and need 30 percent more calories to survive than regular mice that have germs in them and on them. Most germs and parasites are not a devastating illness by any means.
  • Jan 10, 2009, 08:07 PM
    findit
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by nuitgoddess View Post
    Help. I have the same problem and have had no relief. Please email me if you have found a solution. I have tried at least 1 products and solutions, both natural and poisons. Please somebody help. nuitgoddessATyahooDOTcom

    Well then there are many of us with the same problem. I have narrowed it down to be some kind of biting midge (local co-op identified them) and these are flying insects so simply spraying floors and cleaning carpets and furniture is not enough or foggers either. They look like a mini mosquito about 1/8 inch. The females bite for blood like a mosquito. These are small as fine dust when hatched (white specs on furniture, walls, clothing, anywhere) and fit in any crevice corner or fold of material. Before they spawn they look like short threads and yes unfold their wings and fly off. Nothing kills them all, even switching and alternating to multiple chemicals and natural green products, it only kills the older adults while the young and larva are hearty survivors. DEET just deters them for a while, you would have to constantly pump fresh supplies of DEET. They can easily get in drawers and clothing. In clothing they will weave a nest with threads from the fabric. According to some research I have done, the larva have the great capacity to adapt, protein that covers them change to adapt to changes and survive in tempertures of the antarctic winters. In a closed environment these will look for food/survival and human skin and blood is the choice and they will zone in by detecting CO2 from your body.
    Now where are all the expert exterminators and entomologists to help us?
  • Jan 22, 2009, 07:54 AM
    WhatAreThey
    Does anybody have a suspected mold in the house. In my readings (on the internet, so not sure about the validity) that molds that are microorganisms also have much tinier organisms that would feed on them... I have this lint floating and white specks flying in my house and on my clothes. I see them in my husbands clothes and on my kids hair but they are not bothered by them. However I am bothered by them. It started in Agust 2008 and I recall being very stressed at work. I think it is because of molds... Now if I get rid of any molds (HOW) in the house can I get rid of them?
  • Jan 22, 2009, 10:29 AM
    asking
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by findit View Post
    I have narrowed it down to be some kind of biting midge (local co-op identified them) and these are flying insects so simply spraying floors and cleaning carpets and furniture is not enough or foggers either. They look like a mini mosquito about 1/8 inch. The females bite for blood like a mosquito. These are small as fine dust when hatched (white specs on furniture, walls, clothing, anywhere) and fit in any crevice corner or fold of material. Before they spawn they look like short threads and yes unfold their wings and fly off. Nothing kills them all, even switching and alternating to multiple chemicals and natural green products, it only kills the older adults while the young and larva are hearty survivers. DEET just deters them for a while, you would have to constantly pump fresh supplies of DEET. They can easily get in drawers and clothing. In clothing they will weave a nest with threads from the fabric. According to some research I have done, the larva have the great capacity to adapt, protein that covers them change to adapt to changes and survive in tempertures of the antarctic winters. In a closed environment these will look for food/survival and human skin and blood is the choice and they will zone in by detecting CO2 from your body.
    Now where are all the expert exterminators and entomologists to help us?

    Findit, I think you've confused some different insects.

    I did a little reading about no seeums, or biting midges (family Ceratopogonidae) and it appears to me that the larvae are all aquatic. In the water, they go through different stages (instars), and then form a pupa that is also aquatic. The larvae live in water. Most eat algae or detritus. A few are predaceous, but they are eating other bugs.

    Adults that come out of the pupa are full size. They don't grow after that. If you have significant numbers of midges in your house, they are all adults and you need to get fine mesh screens to keep them out. Midges can be very tiny. There are about 5000 different species. But I doubt you would find the larvae in your house, unless you have large pools of standing water in your house, certainly not on furniture, walls, etc.

    If you are finding nests with threads of fabric, that could either be clothes moths (which do not bite people) or dermestid beetle larvae (carpet beetles), which also do not harm people. These insects just eat wool clothes and carpets.

    Mosquitos, ticks, biting flies, and other blood sucking creatures do find their host by following carbon dioxide that we breathe out of our lungs. I've tried holding my breath when plagued by mosquitos, but of course you can't do that very long!

    My kids and I have been bitten by biting midges and they leave discrete huge red welts, not a scattered rash. Ours are small, about 2 mm long, but not microscopic by any means. A lot of the scientific literature on biting midges is Australian. Do you live in Australia?

    Depending on where you live, it's normal to have a few insects, spiders and mites in your house and attempting to eradicate every last one is both futile and bad for your health. The toxins that kill other animals are generally bad for us too, although obviously we are not as sensitive to these chemicals because we are so much bigger.

    To get rid of clothes moths and dermestid beetles, you need to clean any woolen fabrics you are not actually wearing day to day and put then put them away in plastic bags or a cedar chest that is hard for an insect to get into or repellant. Clean regularly by vacuuming and/or sweeping. Obviously moth balls are an option, but they smell bad and they are carcinogenic as well. If you are wearing the clothes regularly, the beetles and moths will normally leave them alone.
    asking
  • Jan 22, 2009, 10:02 PM
    findit
    These are definitely no seeums, tiny as dust and airborne, females do bite, males look for food. Since they are trapped inside the house they are like crazed, in a manner of speaking, desperate to survive and reproduce as what they do naturally. One room of house had to rip out carpet and flood floor boards with bleach and wash walls/ceiling with bleach to kill them. These are not a few but many. Definitely pesticide and weather resistant super midge. I live in Northern US.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by asking View Post
    Findit, I think you've confused some different insects.

    I did a little reading about no seeums, or biting midges (family Ceratopogonidae) and it appears to me that the larvae are all aquatic. In the water, they go through different stages (instars), and then form a pupa that is also aquatic. The larvae live in water. Most eat algae or detritus. A few are predaceous, but they are eating other bugs.

    Mosquitos, ticks, biting flies, and other blood sucking creatures do find their host by following carbon dioxide that we breathe out of our lungs. I've tried holding my breath when plagued by mosquitos, but of course you can't do that very long!

    My kids and I have been bitten by biting midges and they leave discrete huge red welts, not a scattered rash. Ours are small, about 2 mm long, but not microscopic by any means. A lot of the scientific literature on biting midges is Australian. Do you live in Australia?

    Depending on where you live, it's normal to have a few insects, spiders and mites in your house and attempting to eradicate every last one is both futile and bad for your health. The toxins that kill other animals are generally bad for us too, although obviously we are not as sensitive to these chemicals because we are so much bigger.

  • Jan 22, 2009, 10:07 PM
    asking

    Okay, but to repeat, what you wrote below is not consistent with biting midges:
    Quote:

    These are small as fine dust when hatched (white specs on furniture, walls, clothing, anywhere) and fit in any crevice corner or fold of material. Before they spawn they look like short threads and yes unfold their wings and fly off.
    Midges, which are flies, hatch from eggs into water. I do not believe you would find the larvae like "dust" on walls. The adults' wings are also not folded (as might be the case if they were a type of beetle), so they cannot "unfold their wings."

    Have you looked at this dust under a lens or microscope?
  • Jan 23, 2009, 02:50 PM
    findit

    These midges were all over the yard and in garage. They might not be the typical ones you encountered. We were/are getting bite and welt marks body and scalp thinking it was mosquitoes but not. Took some to co-op extension, identified them under microscope. We were bringing them into the house on clothing and yes in hair and they were getting in through the backyard window screens. But we didn't see the no-see-ums. Hopefully frost has killed them off. Since the female lays its first batch without blood meal then each female lays hundreds of offspring and on and on, then they need blood meal for subsequent eggs. Plenty of squirrels and birds for that. There was an event of deer deaths nearby from midge bites. The yard was neglected by previous owner, bought house in winter it was our first summer here. Had the foundation water problem, fixed. Just as many have responded to the same symptoms and agony of trying to rid these things. The many of us aren't hallucinating. Tried pesticides and green products indoors/out, work for a while then they are back. This isn't living its torture. I am looking for resolution short of dumping everything I own out of my house down to the floor boards and that is no guarantee.
  • Jan 23, 2009, 03:15 PM
    asking

    I don't doubt something miserable is happening! Sounds awful. I was just trying to help you sort out what sounds like several different issues to me.

    You said you looked at the flying midges under a microscope, or somebody at an agricultural research coop (?) did. So far so good. "no seeums" is just another name for biting midges. So I assume you saw some of them or you wouldn't know you had them. Yes?

    But I was specifically talking about the "dust" you mentioned, which you said you thought was midge larvae. That would likely not be midge larvae (or they would be in water, not on walls). I assume those are also not the adults. So it would be good to find out what it is. Did you look at the dust under a microscope? Or did someone else look at the dust?
  • Jan 23, 2009, 03:33 PM
    findit

    The midges are fine as dust not the larva. An occasional are larger by mm. So small that in daylight you don't see them as they land on furniture amongst dust. White specs on clothing. Found larva in corners of garage in leaf piles. What can I tell you, they intend to survive and have adapted. Analogize to this true story: Women had a fine rash over front of thighs, upper arms, back and bottom, red thickening skin on finger nuckles. Eight doctors over several months said it was nothing but a dermatologic reaction to something. She went into renal failure, doctors tested further and found it was MRSA. No it did not display the typical features/symptoms. Case in point these guys aren't acting like text book.
  • Jan 24, 2009, 09:51 AM
    asking

    Thanks for answering my question. I do understand that life varies and that it's possible that the generalization that all biting midge larvae are aquatic could have an exception. Still, your account did not make sense to me, so I am trying to at least understand how you know what you know.

    So you are saying the adult midges are white and the size of dust particles? In your first post you said they were about 1/8 inch, which is pretty easy to see and a lot bigger than most dust particles. Could you clarify?

    Have you found them on you biting?

    How did you know the larvae in the leaf piles in the garage were the larvae of the midges?

    Do you think the larvae are biting you too?
  • Jan 24, 2009, 06:48 PM
    findit

    Most are dust size in house, occasional that I found outside big enough to see about1/8". There were leaves piled in corners of garage and around yard after snow thaw, soaking wet. Many trees around. Found out many neighbors have yard flooding, so area is wet. Broken french drain removed to dry out house perimeter. Found midges nest in the wet leaves and moist dirt, saw them and larva (short curved rod like), eggs (look like pods with tails) so I think they are each others. Feel bites at the time bit occasionally, swat where I feel but no bug, stinger in skin several times, very short, burning feeling, I squeeze/wash it out with peroxide. Ones in scalp don't feel until after bit. Only sub zero inactivates them, soon as near 20-30 degrees see them flying. Easiest to see with dim light at night in garage. Open car door they zoom out. First noticed strange heavy white dust in house thought it strange as I dust and next day back. Had all furnace ducts/cold air side cleaned, still there. Change filter weekly. Sick of it all.
  • Jan 24, 2009, 07:03 PM
    findit
    Also noticed that city trees on tree lawn up front by my house and two other houses that have same type tree have moss on trunk and large brances, trees seem sickly many dropping medium to large branches those are dry dead, strange. Going to request city cut these down as falling branches are a hazzard. [QUOTE=findit;1506008]Most are dust size in house, occasional that I found outside big enough to see about1/8". There were leaves piled in corners of garage and around yard after snow thaw, soaking wet. Many trees around. Found out many neighbors have yard flooding, so area is wet. Broken french drain removed to dry out house perimeter. QUOTE]
  • Jan 28, 2009, 01:37 PM
    Jim71

    OMG... I am having the same symptoms! Been to 8 doctors total and they all pretty much say I am delusional! I rather be delusional on having a money tree than these freaking what ever it is! I will try to post some pictures I took on my digi cam in macro settings later after work.

    Has anyone found ANY answers to this problem? I am up to my wits end battling this problem, more sadly is that I see my little 3 year old girl suffering the same! Itching her whole body from head to toe. I have tried everything in my ability to manage but I am running out of fuse... Someone, anyone? Please help us :(
  • Jan 29, 2009, 01:17 AM
    findit

    Another place that they love is computers and monitors, probably the warmth and going in and out of the vents is like a nifty hive nest for them. I had to open hard drive vacuum it out, spray it with Raid home/garden bug spray, covered it with plastic bag for a day then air it out before plugging and starting up. Monitors, vacuumed the vents furiously and took a cloth with Raid and wiped across vents, any air hole and seams around edges, covered with plastic, printer I sprayed a paper sheet put in tray, covered with plastic, keyboard vacuum and shook it out sprayed acros the key board and plastic bag routine. Do it every couple weeks. Lysol disinfectant spray on carpet and vacuum, vacuum, vacuum. Vacuum walls and ceiling since they are flying demons they will rise to the ceiling. I agree this is nuts and these things are demonic.
  • Jan 29, 2009, 07:57 AM
    Jim71
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by findit View Post
    Another place that they love is computers and monitors, probably the warmth and going in and out of the vents is like a nifty hive nest for them. I had to open hard drive vacuum it out, spray it with Raid home/garden bug spray, covered it with plastic bag for a day then air it out before plugging and starting up. Monitors, vacuumed the vents furiously and took a cloth with Raid and wiped across vents, any air hole and seams around edges, covered with plastic, printer I sprayed a paper sheet put in tray, covered with plastic, keyboard vacuum and shook it out sprayed acros the key board and plastic bag routine. Do it every couple weeks. Lysol disinfectant spray on carpet and vacuum, vacuum, vacuum. Vacuum walls and cieling since they are flying demons they will rise to the ceiling. I agree this is nuts and these things are demonic.


    What did you do for the inside of your car? I know if your car is infested with these things you take it with you everywhere you go in that car! I had people sitting behind me and my little girl in restaurants complaining that we had body lice since they itched and itched after we were sat in our table. Of course I went to the doctors after that and was told I have nothing and I am delusional... I had monsterclean(dot)com visit my house and cleaned all my carpets, bug man came and sprayed the entire house and yard, threw a bunch of stuff away, emptied my garage power washed the floors and painted them along with 2 coats of mildew resistant paint and 2 coats of glossy white on the walls but that didn't stop them :(

    However, I did have one of the best night of sleep last night! I went and purchased a honeywell true hepa air-cleaner and that made a BIG difference! I did not feel anything fall on me or craw on my face like I did for the last 2.5 years. I'm thinking about getting more to place around the house and even one in my car. I also printed this thread and brought it to my doctors visit yesterday to show him others are also experiencing the same and asked for a Lyme disease test.

    findit do you get any rash from this crazyness? Not all the time but it seems to come in cycles, maybe every couple of months?
  • Jan 29, 2009, 11:45 AM
    findit

    Bought canned spray from exterminator. Spray car and it is good for a few days. Makes car stink! Air out for couple hours. I have the car detailed inside: steam clean carpets, seats and headliner, clean widows monthly.
    I have bite marks, pin point and the welts, get a rash on upper arms and upper back. Legs itch when clothes rub up. My hands get red and leathery. But don't you know it is all in our heads.
    Exterminator told me the psychosomatic syndrome too, until I told him I had the bugs identified at lab. Then "oh, yes, midges, punkies, no-seeums..." I asked him why didn't he mention them as possibility before, he said he never heard of such thing occurring. Only thing they seem to know is fleas and bedbugs. They sent a guy over to spray and I had to tell hime to spray under sink and vanity, stairs. He didn't know what he was doing, I cancelled the service.
  • Jan 31, 2009, 11:33 AM
    asking

    Here is a photo of some very tiny biting midges that shows how tiny they get.

    http://z.about.com/d/insects/1/0/J/4...ing-midges.jpg

    And various midge larvae--biting and non biting, also black fly larvae
    http://www.nwnature.net/macros/diptera.html
  • Jan 31, 2009, 11:38 AM
    asking
    Quote:

    Biting Midge eggs are roughly bananashaped, with rounded ends and asurface variously adorned withminute projections. They arerarely encountered in natureand are laid in batches of up to fiftyin or near the larval habitat. A tiny worm like larva hatches and is the main feeding stage of the lifecycle. It grows from first to fourthinstar, moulting each time, over a periodof days, weeks or months according to speciesand environmental factors.The pupal stage looks rather like a tiny leglessblunt nosed lobster which breathes air through a pair of smallrespiratory trumpets at the head end. It does not feed duringthis stage

    Maybe this would be helpful to someone:
    MIDGES
  • Apr 14, 2009, 07:26 PM
    nuitgoddess
    I do not know what the hell it is but an Ozone generator seems to control them. I am buying my second one. At least it is better than pesticides. An ozone g generator is not an ionizer. With an ozone generator, you and family and pets must leave the house/car. Ozone is toxic but it removes odors and mold from your house too.

    Although it removes these pests from the air, I have not found a way to remove them from clothing. I am about to throw away ALL my clothing. I have given up on finding a solution to extract and kill them in infested linens, blankets, clothing, curtains, furniture, carpets.

    Good luck to you all
  • Apr 22, 2009, 12:34 PM
    hendrick91

    I have beetle looking insects black with white dots on crunchy when you kill them and they have wings could you tell me what they are please
  • Apr 24, 2009, 05:28 PM
    FlyYakker

    Hendrick me lad, you need to start a new thread.
  • May 2, 2009, 07:18 AM
    Catsmine
    Hendrick, that's a whole different question. Mods, could you open a new thread for him?

    Back to the original post, has anyone looked up psocids? Booklice don't bite, per se, but they can irritate skin.

    Collemba mites are actually a bit smaller than what has been discussed here, but you might look them up, too.
  • May 6, 2009, 04:21 PM
    findit
    How did you use it in your car? I would think it would need to be used weekly for a month or so to kill eggs that hatch. I am at the point of buying one myself and would like to know how you handled the car pests with the ozone generator. It's cheaper than buying a car or constant cost of shampoo interior cleaning that is short lived.



    Quote:

    Originally Posted by nuitgoddess View Post
    I do not know what the hell it is but an Ozone generator seems to control them. I am buying my second one. At least it is better than pesticides. An ozone g generator is not an ionizer. With an ozone generator, you and family and pets must leave the the house/car.

  • May 12, 2009, 03:34 AM
    mmarsha

    I too have the same problem along with some kind of mite or bug that looks like it has a tail or a hook?? Has any one seen anything like this? I wash my clothes in ammonia and borax and iron everything including my bed, every night. It is the only way I can get any peace.
  • May 12, 2009, 08:49 AM
    Catsmine
    MMarsha,

    That sounds like springtails.Image Search Results



    Image Search Results
  • May 14, 2009, 09:48 AM
    findit
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by mmarsha View Post
    I too have the same problem along with some kind of mite or bug that looks like it has a tail or a hook??? Has any one seen anything like this? I wash my clothes in ammonia and borax and iron everything including my bed, every night. It is the only way I can get any peace.

    Does this thing bite? Then it probably is biting midges, the biting females have a stinger like a mosquito but classified as a fly while the female midge not male midges bite to get blood to lay eggs for each batch after the first batch that uses the reserve that the female midge inherently has. It is an immense battle to get rid of these things. I have stripped carpets, used insecticides but they return. It is near impossible to get them out of the floor boards and between/under the floors in the house as they are survivors and will hide anywhere to survive. They like light fixtures and are attracted to lights and warm places such as heat vents and electrical equipment. Like dust, they stick due to static electricity, including computers. The human scent and CO2 from human breathing is a direct signal for them that human blood is around. Then again they will feed of any blood bearing creature/mammals such as dogs, squirrels, birds.
    Spring tail mites look like tiny caterpillars under a microscope. They have a hook they use to jump and hook on to things to catapult themselves. So you may be feeling the springtail jumping. I lived in a rural area once that had issues with them, especially in barns. But they usually sweep off like soot and don't cause the misery of biting midges.
    It is well known that there are biting and non biting midges. In the antarctic the midge is the only insect that survives the sub zero temps, so the thought that the cold will kill them is a mistake. These midges are survivors and will adapt/metamorphasis.
  • May 15, 2009, 03:15 PM
    mmarsha
    Yes, living with these bugs is torture, and even more so mentally when everyone acts like you are some anti bug and germ person, you know, like you have a mental disorder. This is a real problem, as real as the stinging red mosquito looking bites. We need to find some common thing that we all have, like problems with a wet basement or water around the foundation of our houses?? My basement has been flooding, I don't know if that could be contributing to my problem with these bugs and YES, they are some type of bug that bites. Having problems with flooding and foundational water problems is something that I also have, now I am wondering is there any other common things in our environment that may also be contributing to having these unknown but very real pest? For myself I can not think of anything else except for the fact that I live in an old house in the country? There is a creek near my house ' along with cattle and hay?? I love where I live but I am ready to start looking for another place to live if I can't get rid of this crap. I have been through hell, it is better than it has been, but I want these bugs GONE! As I'm sure everyone who has them does. Is there anything else that anyone can think of that may be a common factor?And just for a quick add on to my note, I have thrown everything out just about and still I am having this problem. I am not a dirty person, I can't understand why I am being infested with these bugs.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by findit View Post
    These midges were all over the yard and in garage. They might not be the typical ones you encountered. We were/are getting bite and welt marks body and scalp thinking it was mosquitoes but not. Took some to co-op extension, identified them under microscope. We were bringing them into the house on clothing and yes in hair and they were getting in through the backyard window screens. But we didn't see the no-see-ums. Hopefully frost has killed them off. Since the female lays its first batch without blood meal then each female lays hundreds of offspring and on and on, then they need blood meal for subsequent eggs. Plenty of squirrels and birds for that. There was an event of deer deaths nearby from midge bites. The yard was neglected by previous owner, bought house in winter it was our first summer here. Had the foundation water problem, fixed. Just as many have responded to the same symptoms and agony of trying to rid these things. The many of us aren't hallucinating. Tried pesticides and green products indoors/out, work for a while then they are back. This isn't living its torture. I am looking for resolution short of dumping everything I own out of my house down to the floor boards and that is no guarantee.


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