Quote Originally Posted by TimidK
Ive had those bastards in my bed before. It sucks a bunch, I had to wash every blanket and sheet on my bed. At first my whole back was itching then my whole body, and since I kept scratching I had lumps everywhere! Now I change my sheets more often..
Was that mites?? or crabs??

Keeping a clean house is a good thing....but even when the house is kept spotless, rugs vacuumed, etc. and you still have the critters, check with your organic gardening center and buy a bag of ladybugs. They EAT mites, aphids, and such, without doing harm to anything else. When their food source(mites and aphids) is gone, they go away.

Its an organic solution that will work well in the garden also :thumbsup:
Mississippi Steve Reviewed by Mississippi Steve on . Something to Think About Next Time You Get High Know what a dust mite is? That's one in the picture below. Their favorite food is human skin. Not the skin that's still on our bodies but the dead skin that's continually falling off of our bodies. They like to hang out in places where we spend a lot of time (and lose a lot of skin) like your couch, favorite chair, or your bed. In fact, the average bed has anywhere between 100,000 to 10 million of these guys scampering around. And when you're in there they're scampering over you too. Think Rating: 5