saluki
Well-known member

Well, one bat.
For the past week I've worked late every night (on Sunday I was still at work at midnight!), so, tonight - having finished at an almost-descent 8.00pm I thought I'd better catch up on my emails and take a look on BirdForum - something I haven't had the time or will (staring at a monitor all day tends to dull one's appetite for surfing) to do all week.
Things are never so simple in my life however. There was a bat flying around my 'office' (spare bedroom) this evening. I switched the light off and considered what to do. I contemplated phoning an aquaintance of mine who is a bat expert, but I had visions of mist nets and huge telephone bills to Scotland whilst I described the poor beast in intimate detail. So, I went over to the window (one of those horizontal affairs at the top which don't open particularly wide) and opened it as wide as possible. No luck. I could see why - presumably, unless the bat was above the window, almost on the ceiling, the gap would hardly register as an escape route on it's radar. Next, a hunt for a long-unused folding butterfly net proved fruitless. Landing net (for fishing)? Too heavy - it might harm the bat. The poor creature solved the problem itself by dropping down into a log basket full of, er, bits of printers, computers and other vital items of hardware I think I might one day need, but know I never will! I grabbed a blanket and covered the basket, then took the whole lot downstairs into the back porch and left it there with the back door open (after removing the blanket, of course!). Hopefully, by morning, it will have resumed it's normal life - or built me a whole new PC system from the hardware to hand.
As to what species of bat it was, I have no idea - my concern was with the safety of the bat rather than identification. It looked too large to be a Pipistrelle, but it is very difficult to judge size when one is confronted with a bat in such unusual circumstances - compared to a moth or crane fly, it looked huge! The only other bat I see regularly around me is the Noctule - which it definately wasn't.
Has anyone else had a bat enter their house? I can only imagine it followed an insect which flew through my open window.
saluki
For the past week I've worked late every night (on Sunday I was still at work at midnight!), so, tonight - having finished at an almost-descent 8.00pm I thought I'd better catch up on my emails and take a look on BirdForum - something I haven't had the time or will (staring at a monitor all day tends to dull one's appetite for surfing) to do all week.
Things are never so simple in my life however. There was a bat flying around my 'office' (spare bedroom) this evening. I switched the light off and considered what to do. I contemplated phoning an aquaintance of mine who is a bat expert, but I had visions of mist nets and huge telephone bills to Scotland whilst I described the poor beast in intimate detail. So, I went over to the window (one of those horizontal affairs at the top which don't open particularly wide) and opened it as wide as possible. No luck. I could see why - presumably, unless the bat was above the window, almost on the ceiling, the gap would hardly register as an escape route on it's radar. Next, a hunt for a long-unused folding butterfly net proved fruitless. Landing net (for fishing)? Too heavy - it might harm the bat. The poor creature solved the problem itself by dropping down into a log basket full of, er, bits of printers, computers and other vital items of hardware I think I might one day need, but know I never will! I grabbed a blanket and covered the basket, then took the whole lot downstairs into the back porch and left it there with the back door open (after removing the blanket, of course!). Hopefully, by morning, it will have resumed it's normal life - or built me a whole new PC system from the hardware to hand.
As to what species of bat it was, I have no idea - my concern was with the safety of the bat rather than identification. It looked too large to be a Pipistrelle, but it is very difficult to judge size when one is confronted with a bat in such unusual circumstances - compared to a moth or crane fly, it looked huge! The only other bat I see regularly around me is the Noctule - which it definately wasn't.
Has anyone else had a bat enter their house? I can only imagine it followed an insect which flew through my open window.
saluki