I had never met a bed bug until one afternoon in Kuala Lumpur. In the past eight years of extensive travels, I had heard many a tale about the terror of bed bugs. How they had ruined whole trips! And more seriously how difficult it is to get rid of bed bugs.
For those who haven’t really heard about bed bugs but don’t fancy a bug in the bed, they are more than just a harmless bug. They are the back packers nemesis.
Beg bugs are little bugs that have eight different stages to their life cycle. When moving onto the next stage of the cycle of their life, they need to drink blood, from whoever is sleeping in their bed. They are like pacman, chomping along in a line and once they get a hold of your bed, bag or clothes, there is just no stopping them.
So my encounter had me hurling out the room at top speed! It all started when I was staying in a guest house which I will leave as nameless however I have written a review on a popular website to warn others.
I had stayed at this guesthouse for 5 nights already to take in the sights of Kuala Lumpur and to wait for my Indian visa to come through. For the past two days I had an ant infestation even though I had no food in my room. After I repeatedly asked for it to be cleaned to no avail (it wasn’t the cleanest guesthouse to begin with), I insisted on moving rooms.
Into room 26 I entered. After finding a tissue underneath the pillow and what looked like pubic hair on the bed sheet, I was please to be leaving for India the next day. I decided that night I would be sleeping in my sleeping bag but luckily had not taken it out of my backpack.
Off I went for some food before I headed back to the room and sat with my laptop replying to some comments on my blog. After about an hour I noticed a little bug on the sheet. Unable to kill anything, I flicked it off the bed not thinking much off it. But a little while after there was another one, on me!
Suddenly it dawned on me. Is this a bed bug? I quickly googled bed bugs and was horrified to identify this bug as a bed bug.
Off I march to reception – bug and laptop in tow. The poor man on reception had both of these thrust in his face. He quickly called over a co-worker who did not seem concerned. I then stomped back to my room and started dragging my stuff out into the corridor.
I was approached by one of the receptionists who got my full rant about the unclean bed covers, the bed bugs and how “this really was not cool”. He did kindly help carry my bags into the reception area where I plonked myself down to find somewhere else to stay.
Following two more conversations, I was offered the ant room back. It was late in the evening, why don’t I stay just one more night, they are very sorry. Finally I accepted and headed up to my apparently clean room which is ready for the next guest.
I was very surprised (or perhaps I shouldn’t have been) to find the same throw and pillowcases on the bed as I had been using for the past 5 days. When I pointed this out, I was asked if I wanted to change them. What’s the point I exclaimed! It’s only my germs on them. In hindsight yes they should have been changed as how many people prior to me have they been recycled from?
The next morning I checked out. When payment was requested for the last night stay, I almost fell over when they requested the full price of any room rather than the cheaper bed bug room.
After a lot of discussion and me threatening to just leave without paying, they kept my 50MYR (£10) deposit and I saved myself 20MYR (£4) on the most insect riddled stay.
And the worse thing was that when we were discussing the price of my stay, I discovered after my departure from the room, they had had given it to another guest, bugs and all.
Tips on how to avoid bed bugs and what to do if you catch them:
1/ Read reviews. Any sign of bedbugs in a review and I won’t even consider a place.
2/ Check for signs:
-Check the bed sheets. If you see small red stains then these are signs that bed bugs are around. These are left after feeding on you guessed it, your blood.
-check the edge of the bed, bed bugs moult as they grow and you might find their brown exoskeletons in the bed frame or collected in dips in the mattress.
– does your room smell musty like wet towels? This is the pheromones which bed bugs release.
– if you feel itchy in bed and find red bits in a line or zigzagged then you have been got by bed bugs.
3/ Ensure a certain level of cleanliness. Have they reused bedding? Even the cleanest places can suffer with bedbugs however if they do not keep a certain level of cleanliness then they probably won’t sort out bed bugs either.
4/ If you have stayed in a place with bed bugs then you need to exterminate them from your stuff. This involves either freezing them or boiling them. Wash your clothes on a high heat, freeze anything that you can’t wash on a high heat and I am afraid that your backpack/suitcase has to go if you can not wash or freeze it. Get out of the place as soon of possible but do not introduce your clothes including the ones you are wearing to the new place you go to or else you will spread them.
5/ Warn others! Don’t you wish someone had warned you? Get on the reviews such as TripAdvisor and who you have booked through and tell the world! However if it is a one off occasion and the place are taking steps to fix it then be a little bit more lenient. The nicest of places can get bed bugs due to their guest staying in an infested place. Shout it to the world.
I’m lucky that I haven’t met any bed bugs yet. But they definitely don’t look fun! So many bites looks like terror! It sucks that you had to deal with them – thanks for sharing it with others!! That’s definitely one of the most important parts of the experience!
The headline already tells the unpleasant topic. Bed bugs are obviously an absolutely downside when it comes to visiting new places. Vermin in genreal can of course ruin a trip but I think bed bugs are some of the worst. I once had huge black cockroaches in a 5 Star Hotel on Mallorca, a nightmare! And the staff of course ignored my complains, I was definitely not the first one. In this case I think only radical (expensive) methods will help and I guess most hotels / places want to avoid this…
So sad! Happened once for me too in a hotel. I too left a review on a hotel booking site and twitter. Its really so painful. My room had beg bugs, and some potato chips on the floor, crumpled sheets, stained quilt etc!!! So, I totally relate to it!
Lucky enough not to have met any as of yet and hopefully your tips will help me avoid having any close encounters!
You are extremely lucky not to have come across these terrors
Yikes!!! I cringed throughout your story! How awful!
I know right!
Oh my god that’s just grotesque. I’m sorry you had such an awful experience! Your tips are real useful – I will keep a lookout for them on my next stay!
Keep your eyes and nose on the look out! They smell for sure!
Bed bugs are the worst. I got bitten by these little nightmares in Austria and had welts. What I learned on how to keep them away is if you have room, bring satin sheets with you travelling as they hate them. I also bring portable steamers with me as if you steam the sheets of the bed, you are likely to get rid of them. I am so sorry to read of your horrific experience and that pubic hair? OMG. I would be outta there with that alone even without the bugs.
I have heard about the satin sheets also. But they could avoid your bed sheets but still crawl into your bag :-/
You are right though, I should have left when I saw the pubic hair :-/
I had bed bugs on my very first night of a two year trip. I arrived in Delhi at 3am and was taken to a room in the attic with no windows and low lights. In the morning I was covered in bites on my legs. They took ages to heal and were unsightly. This was 25 years ago before the days of hotel reviews and trip advisor etc! It really marred what was supposed to be the start of an amazing adventure. Suffice to say, I have done lots of travelling since then and have never encountered the little beasties since then!
Oh n, how unfortunate Wendy! It seems to be the rooms with no windows as that is where I encountered them in KL. Did you carry them around with them for the next two years or did you manage to get rid of them?