Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Oh poor you! Don't try and do anything yourself, it can often make it worse. Contact these guys- http://www.bed-bugs.co.uk/ my parents used them (in cambridge!) and they were brilliant. They are a total menace and you need to get professional help ASAP. Wash sheets and clothes etc at 60 degrees to kill them for a start- anything cooler and they can survive.


My parents had them come out and get rid of the bugs, they also had some stuff frozen in battersea and haven't had a problem since. Just PLEASE don't try and do it yourself with sprays etc. they can often spread the problem and encourage the bugs to hide. They can survive 18months with no food so encouraging then to hide is the worst thing you want to do!


Good luck!

I remember reading an article a while back about an epidemic of bed bugs in the US, particularly New York. I seem to recall it saying that they are often transmitted by people travelling - they pick them up there and unwittingly take them home with them. See here: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/oct/21/bedbugs-invaded-new-york

Yep - trainlines and bus routes out of London and the tube..... I remember the guy who owns the company recommended above telling us NEVER to sit down on London's public transport - particularly at night time, which, of course, is when the little buggers come and and bite - esp if you've had a few too many to drink and are snoozing merrily away. They can tell you're asleep and are ready to bite.. .


We think our bedbug infestation a few years ago now came from my OH's office. He contracts and was sitting next to guy who'd apparently been itching for months and who thought he had a skin condition :,(

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Returning to the question, although still not directly answering I'm afraid as ive not lived on that road: I have previously lived in a house where the railway line was behind the house and over a playing field, and also in a flat blocked from the railway line by at least one more block worth of houses. I would not live that close to a railway line again. In the house the noise with the windows open always disturbed me at night. And you need to bear it mind it is not just the timetables of passenger trains you need to consider, at night time there could be freight trains too. That was my problem in the flat: not noise, I was shielded from that, but the weight of the freight trains passing made the whole building shake enough to wake me up. If you are a sounder sleeper or less sensitive to noise it could be fine. I would suggest checking if freight trains use that route though.
    • Thanks TWB, that is all really useful. However, if  memory serves, The Fox Project actually directed me to The Fox Angels when I phoned them, and had no facilities in this area for sending anybody out themselves. They seem to be based in Tunbridge Wells. The Greenwich Wildlife Network also just suggests other organisations who may help in certain situations. To the best of my knowledge, however, for situations involving foxes, including injured or ill  foxes, Fox Angels are the only people who have someone available very locally who can come out virtually immediately (I waited maybe half an hour after I phoned them). The person who came had all the necessary equipment to move the fox, was very gentle and caring, and took the fox to a local vet (it sadly died). It's possible that if you phoned a local vet they would help, if you could get the fox there. The RSPCA has guidelines on what to do if you find an  animal in need,  however although they have recently had a campaign on this (and sent me a badge and a copy of the guidelines on a pocket sized card) I can't find them online. I attach a photo. Don't know if the QR code would work from a photo.    
    • My mum (91 years young!) well remembers going to Austin's as a child, which she described as an 'Aladdin's Cave'!  She absolutely loved it - and is still a shopping fiend to this day (I 'blame' Austin's 😉). Going back up Peckham Rye, passing Austin's on your right hand-side, just past Phillips Walk (so not far from Austin's at all), I believe there was a British Relay Wireless shop - this would have been in the late 1930s/early 1940s.  Does anyone know anything about this? My grandad (my mum's dad) used to manage it; it was severely damaged in The Blitz - but I am having trouble locating it.  Mum's memory is dim (she was 6 at the time); she originally thought it was in Rye Lane, but we think now it was in Peckham Rye just up from Phillips Walk (originally Phillips Road). 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...