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Sorry did not have an internet to respondHave you told the hospitaleros and what was there reaction? Buen Camino, SY
I already took all the mesures-I washed all my clothes on high temperature and dry it in the dryer 3 times@MelaCro you need to take responsibility and action now. You must inform the hosptiliera/os at your current location that you have been bitten. You must inform the Albergue where you think you were bitten - otherwise how will they know and be able to deal with the issue. You must follow standard procedures to decontaminate your gear. You may be spreading the little sods along the camino and the only person who can stop that is you.
Bedbugs are not microscopic creatures! Keeping your things minimal and well organized is helpful. I think that a good shake (somewhere away from your other belongings!) is a good idea in the morning. Enclosing your pack and belongings in a bag at night when they are most active is the best protection (and enclosing your sleeping bag during the day). Then if you find you've been bitten, it helps prioritize the management.I am wondering, since bed bugs appear to be very common this year, what other pilgrims do who have large quantities of merino wool garments which should not be treated with very high heat. Could they be sprayed with permethrin, left for some time, then washed? I suspect that this is what I will do with all my merino garments when I get home. I remember one occasion when a helpful friend whom I was visiting after a mountain excursion put all my dirty clothes through the washer and dryer and retrieved one very shrunken woolen undershirt for our mutual laughter. But my budget will not permit me to laugh at the loss of most of my hiking clothes (wool socks also do not like hot wash and dry). Any suggestions?
Bedbugs are not microscopic creatures! Keeping your things minimal and well organized is helpful. I think that a good shake (somewhere away from your other belongings!) is a good idea in the morning. Enclosing your pack and belongings in a bag at night when they are most active is the best protection (and enclosing your sleeping bag during the day). Then if you find you've been bitten, it helps prioritize the management.
When you get home, you could put the merino into the freezer for a few days/weeks at -15C or so. I think that the agitation causes shrinkage even more that heat. Consider ironing your shirts. But again, inspection is likely enough if you do it carefully.
The freezer at the bottom of my 2-year-old fridge goes down to -17C, which is supposed to kill bedbugs in a few days. (As soon as we got the fridge delivered, I put a thermometer in, to check the temperature for this very reason!) If your fridge is older, it might not get so cold, but it is easy to check with a simple outdoor thermometer.I have certainly heard the suggestion of putting woolens into a chest freezer before, but I don't own a chest freezer and am quite uncertain whether the little freezer above my fridge would have any effect on bedbugs