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6 Houseplants That Will Detox Your Home

flower pot

Clean your indoor air with houseplants!

We’d all like to think of our home and office space as places where we are safe and healthy. After all, the majority of us as humans spend more than 90% of our time inside! Unfortunately, this isn’t the case. Furnishings, upholstery, synthetic building materials, cleaning products, and other household items used in our homes and office spaces are all responsible for putting harmful chemicals and toxins into the air. Without proper care and air filtration, our bodies end up absorbing these toxic contaminants.

Common Toxic Contaminants (Houseplants Will Help With):

Trichloroethylene

  • Found in printing inks, adhesives, paints, varnishes, and metal degreasers.
  • Commonly given off by furniture.
  • Believed to be a contributing factor in the depletion of the ozone.
  • Can cause liver and kidney cancer.

Benzene

  • Not safe at any exposure level.
  • Responsible for the aroma around gas stations.
  • Given off by gasoline, paint, rubber, tobacco, smoke, detergent, and a variety of synthetic fibers.  
  • Can cause bone marrow failure and leukemia as well as damages to the kidneys, lungs, liver, heart, brain, and DNA strands in humans and animals.

Formaldehyde

  • Used for manufacturing building materials, household products, and hair products.
  • Can cause myeloid leukemia and other rare cancers.

Xylene

  • Used as a solvent in rubber, paint, printing, leather and in medical industries.
  • Found in airplane fuel, gas, and cigarette smoke.
  • Long-term exposure leads to headaches and cognitive impairment.

Toluene

  • Used to manufacture paints, pharmaceuticals, and rubber.
  • Found in gas and adhesives.
  • Can cause fatigue, confusion, weakness, memory loss, dizziness, and liver and kidney damage.

Ammonia

  • Primary building block for many pharmaceutical products and commercial cleaning products, also used in foods and fertilizers.
  • Classified as IDLH (Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health).
  • Toxic to aquatic life.

So how do we go about combating toxins and improving our overall indoor air quality?

  1. Make your home shoe-free.
  2. Avoid dry cleaning or choose an organic dry cleaner.
  3. Keep your carpets cleaned. 
  4. Install water filters on your shower heads and sink taps. 
  5. Bring in a mold professional to address any mold growth. 
  6. Avoid pressboard/ particle board furniture–stick to real wood furniture. 
  7. Install air filters into your HVAC system.
  8. Invest in a few indoor plants that are pros at air filtration!

Number eight is the big one here. According to a NASA study, these six indoor plants play a major role in removing harmful indoor air contaminants:  1. Peace Lilies have powerful air filtration capabilities, filtering pollutants like benzene, formaldehyde, trichloroethylene, xylene, toluene, and ammonia. The peace lily tends to prefer shade and should be kept moist but is relatively easy to grow and flowers for most of the summer.  However, if you suffer from tough allergies, a peace lily might not be a good choice. Even though they’re great at removing indoor toxins, the peace lily gives off pollen and floral scents that worsen allergies.   2. Snake Plant or “Mother-in-Law’s Tongue is one of the best indoor plants for improving air quality, especially good at removing formaldehyde. Snake plants are relatively cheap and require very little care. Note: keep your snake plant in your bedroom. Unlike most indoor plants which take away O2 at night, snake plants give off O2 which will help you sleep better.  3. Aloe Vera Plants are typically known for their gel and it’s healing abilities but they’re also great indoor air filters that remove traces of benzene in the air from the household cleaners we use.  Aloe plants require very little attention and are pretty tough to kill–best for any of our not-so-green thumb friends out there. 4. English Ivy reduces the amount of airborne fecal matter (perfect for homes with pets), formaldehyde, and benzene. English Ivy likes both sun and shade–try for indirect sunlight if possible. Water your English ivy occasionally.  If your mind wanders often at work, here’s a good plant for you. Putting an English ivy plant in your office will help absorb benzene, which will allow you to focus much better! 5. Weeping Fig is a type of ficus that helps filter formaldehyde, xylene, and toluene from your indoor spaces. Weeping figs need just the right amount of light and water, which can make them difficult plants for indoor plant beginners.  The living room is a good location for a weeping fig but keep in mind these guys can grow tall.  6. Gerbera Daisies are exceptional at filtering benzene, formaldehyde, and trichloroethylene. Similar to the snake plant, the gerbera daisy takes in carbon dioxide and give off oxygen at night. These beautiful flowering indoor plants take a little more effort to care for than most others–read up before you make a commitment to a gerbera daisy.   Use a gerbera daisy to bring bright color and cleaner air to dull rooms.  If you decide to introduce one or two of these indoor plants to your home, let us know what you think. Do you find yourself breathing easier, sleeping better, or feeling healthier?  If protecting more than just the air quality of your home is a concern of yours schedule a service with us. Our specialists are trained to check for and resolve any indoor home issues.

6 Houseplants That Will Detox Your Home

Bedbug inspection

How to Know if Your Hotel Has Bedbugs

Upon entering a hotel room, do you typically reach for the tiny toiletries, take a leap onto the bed, or perhaps start by inspecting for bed bugs? Knowing what to look for is essential. Anticimex Carolinas Service Manager Christian Tweed has shared valuable insights on identifying bed bugs in your hotel room and preventing them from hitching a ride back home with you. And if bed bugs do become an unexpected part of your vacation, remember that Clark’s Pest Control is here to assist!



Q&A with a Pest Professional


How do bed bugs get inside hotels?


Bed bugs are primarily hitchhiking insects as opposed to foraging ones, meaning that they get carried around on people’s clothes and belongings. Someone with an active infestation in their home can easily bring bed bugs to their hotel, but they can also be picked up during travel (airplanes, taxis, and rideshare services) and brought to a hotel room.


What do people misunderstand about bed bugs in hotels?


From a probability standpoint, all hotels will deal with bed bugs at some point in time. If you think about a bed bug’s method of travel, there’s literally nothing a hotel can do to stop them from being carried in. What I have realized is that luxury hotels are more likely to have an aggressive response to dealing with a bed bug case once it’s identified as they tend to have a higher quality of service and a reputation to protect. While this isn’t always the case, it has been my experience more often than not.

Got bedbugs? Call Clark’s at 866-781-4991 today!

What do you recommend travelers do when they get to their room to check for bed bugs?


Most hotel headboards hang directly on the wall. I start my inspection here before even looking at the bed itself. I have found bed bugs, their exoskeletons, and the telltale black stains they leave behind around the edges of or in the crevices of headboards. If the headboard looks clean, move on to looking over the pillowcases and comforter for any signs or stains. You can dig into the bedding as deep as you want here, but I encourage people to look over the top layer of things at the very least.


What are some lesser-known signs of bed bugs in your hotel room?


The specifics of the black stains they leave behind, which as gross as it sounds, are just digested blood as that’s all that bed bugs feed on. If the stains are on a hard surface, they will be small dots as if left behind by an ink pen and will smear into a brownish gray when moisture is applied. If they’re on fabric, they will usually bleed along the fibers making a small diamond, square or X shape.


If there are bed bugs in your hotel room, can they travel home with you?


They absolutely can, however this is easy to prevent. While staying in a hotel, keep as much of your clothing and luggage off the beds as possible. Storing suitcases in the bathroom might sound odd, but it’s an effective method of prevention.

Don’t tackle bedbugs yourself, call Clark’s at 866-781-4991!

What should you do with your suitcase if you suspect your hotel has bed bugs?


When arriving home from a trip, leave your luggage in the garage or on a porch and bring your clothes in one load of laundry at a time. If the clothes are dirty, wash them like you normally would, if they’re clean then run them through the dryer for at least forty-five minutes. Once your suitcase is empty, vacuum over it meticulously (don’t forget to empty the vacuum when you’re done), or if you’re in the right climate, expose it to heat for a few days by placing it in your vehicle (parked in the sun) or for a few weeks in your attic.


The Clark’s Solution


If you brought bed bugs back to you home, Clark’s is here to help. Our Bedbug Control service is designed to eliminate bedbugs and create a safe, comfortable environment.


A Clark’s Pest Professional will do an inspection and recommend a plan of attack to get rid of bed bugs now and prevent them from hatching in the future. Call Clark’s at 866-781-4991 today for more information.




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