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I woke up a while after midnight today with a bird or bat circling around in my (dark) bedroom. It was back out the (hall) door before i got glasses, bathrobe, flashlight, etc. going. No way to know where it is now; the on-call maintenance guy & i think/hope that it wormed its way back out the funny little hole in the brickwork that we're guessing that it wormed its way in through....searching the apartment didn't turn it up.... Seems unlikely that it's still in here....or that it's dangerous (a rabid bat, anyone?)....but it's going to be a while before i get back to sleep tonight.... This item is for discussion unwelcome indoor flying things that aren't just "bugs".......
19 responses total.
What luck - having a bat in your room. They do get indoors now and then, especially this time of year when they are doing what is called "swarming" - looking for hibernation sites. But your bedroom isn't a suitable hibernation site (for a bat), so it is best to catch them and release them outdoor. In the meantime, enjoy their silent flight skills. Rabies is extremely rare among bats, but still if you come across an ill bat - one on the ground, or acting erratically, don't touch it!
I caught a little bat at work the other day. It had been flying around the manufacturing area and I watched it until it settled down on a lab coat hung from a hanger in a corner. I found a small container and calmly managed to get it in without any difficulty. It looked much larger in flight than it did all folded up. This is only the second time I've seen a living bat up close. Fascinating! I took it outside and released it after showing to a few people. What disappointed me was how many people thought it best to just kill it. It seemed to me that most people feared them. I'm not sure why. In flight it was about the size of a field sparrow. People don't talk about killing sparrows. Perhaps it's because they are night creatures and having them fly around in their bedroom at night is a spooky experience.
Good work! I caught a bat similarly, but it was in February in my office building, so I kept it at home and fed it until Spring. I think it was mighty glad to have no more dog food pellets. It was *very* eager for pill bugs when I could find them in early Spring. Not exactly their usual fare, but at least alive. There is a long Western antipathy toward bats, coming mostly from Christianity (darkness, night, netherworld, hence Satan and all that nonsense). In China, figures of bats are on many objects as symbols of good fortune: the words for bat and good fortune are pronounced the same.
Sparrows don't get rabies. One of our friends was chasing a bat around his house with a tennis racket and deathly afraid of it.
Very few bats get rabies either. Much fewer than dogs, racoons, foxes, etc. The tennis racket is NOT the way to deal with a bat. Let it calm down and roost, and then slip a box over it and release it outside. Bats contribute much more to society than dogs do (they eat lots of insects). The bat is much more afraid of you than you need be of it.
I've mentioned this incident to a fair number of people. It's either facinating or depressing how many of them have been told `bird or maybe bat' and heard "bat". This included the apartment maintenance staff, one of whom removed a BIRD's nest from a spot a few inches outside the hole that he thought that the bird or bat got in through. In one of his stories, Feynman tells about confessing to a prank to his entire fraternity, under fraternity word of honor. All the witnesses to his confession heard and remembered him denying, NOT confessing to, the deed.
The parenthetical "(a rabid bat, anyone?)" probably contributes to the conclusion-jumping.
Update! While spewing opinions in agora tonight, the bat (lights & glasses on this time, no doubt about identity) showed up again. Of course it vanished before the on-call maintenance person (experienced with bats, gloves on hands, my rent check in her figurative pocket) got here. Searched to no avail, but luckily spotted it hanging on brickwork in a dark corner close to the hypothesized (& since plugged) entry hole as she was headed out the door. Out it went! ...leaving behind a few questions. Are/were there more flying critters around here, or ways for more to get in? Did Mr. (sexist assumption) Bat go without food & water for 3 days between sightings? My apartment is very short on flying bat chow, and the skins on a couple plump, ripe plums in the kitchen are unbroken. I don't dry the sinks & tub after using them, so water (in theory) wouldn't be a problem. I definitely want to clean the kitchen before assuming surfaces to be sanitary.... Any thoughts from the assembled bat experts?
No fang holes on your neck?
You may assume that there are lots "more flying critters" in the vicinity, and some will be looking into holes to get into buildings. The Big Brown Bat, in particular, is a house-dweller. They do not eat fruit (there are no Fruit Bats in Michigan in nature). They do land to drink, but usually on trees. Bats can survive quite a while without water or food (of course, they survive for months without food or water when they are hibernating, but during that time they drop their body temperature and remain inactive - arousal during the hibernation period can lead to their death from starvation).
Well, we just found a bat in the office this morning. I botched the first capture attempt, but after it settled down I caught it easily. You know those cheap rubber bats you swing around on a string? That's exactly what a real bat looks like in flight. Kind of a letdown.
I'm surprised you say that. Living bats are aerial acrobats. A lump on a string has no resemblance to that.
Maybe outside the office they are, but inside it was nothing special. The only thing we screwed up was in not taking any pictures. We even have a digital camera in the office for brochure photos.
Okay, so no sign of activity or droppings between 1AM Tuesday and 1AM Friday (but "lots" of activity & plenty of obvious droppings those times) is highly consistent with *one* bat that got in very late Monday & found its door plugged midday Tuesday, right? If so, i can clean up, keep my eyes open, but not be much bothered. If not, then i need to be searching for holes to plug, perhaps another bat in here, etc. (Far less favorable scenario.) Some evidence in the kitchen suggests that Mr. Bat likes cinnamon sugar. Can anyone tell me more useful things about the indoor behavior patterns of bats?
Jim just realized that the 3/4" holes he drilled in his soffits for ventilation are an open invitation to mice (probably also bats). One of them carried a hoard of sunflower seeds farther into his attic and stored them on his sweater. What size holes can bats fit through?
A 3/4 inch hold is plenty enough for almost all Michigan bats (maybe not for a Hoary Bat). Bats indoor fly around until they find a comfortable place to hang up. If not disturged they will then come and go daily through whatever way it got in, unless that is just too tricky. They do not eat sugar, much less cinnamon sugar. Oh Yes - they will defecate.
Damn that defecation. I'd love to have bats, but only if they could be trained to use the toilet.
So bats aren't interested in any of the food & drink possibilities in a flying-insect-free house, just in using it as an artifical cave in which to sleep?
Yes.
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