JDL538
Silver Member
We have Bats in the barn..We don't have any Mosquitoes very few bugs of any kind...Bats are not a problem for us.
I have to ask. What does having the bedroom doors open have to do with attracting bats?
Do you think you could direct a powerful fan towards where they are sleeping, can you get to their location, maybe some expanding spray foam could fill the void that they are in . If I remember right they dont like mothballs with fermaldihyde ?
Well, here's our bat story. I've told it here before, but what the hey....
- Bat flying around in house.
- Kids were sleeping with bedroom doors open.
- Caught the bat in a net.
- Called the health department.
- They said to call the humane society.
- Called humane society.
- They came and got the bat.
- Said they had to send it to bat lab in Indianapolis for testing and would call us if it tested positive for rabies.
- I asked if they'd call us if it tested negative.
- They said NO. Only if its positive.
- I asked how I'd know if they ever tested our bat at all?
- Made them say "Hmmm?"
- Humane society took the bat to a local veterinarian (happened to be our Vet) for euthanization, dry ice packaging, and shipment to Indy on a bus.
- Called the health department again and asked about call if tested negative.
- Health department said they'd never had that request before.... stupid Hoosiers!
- Health department (very sarcastically) said they'd call the bat lab special for us to ease our mind.
- Get call from health department later.....
- They lost our bat. %^&*$!!!
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- 4 family members will have to get rabies shots at $600 per person not covered by health insurance!!!
- Call my Vet, who shipped the bat.
- He is livid.
- Three other families had bats shipped that day as well.
- He makes some calls. Finds the Indy bat lab picked up the bat at the bus station.
- Gives me the number of the Indy bat lab.
- Call Indy bat lab. They deny picking it up.
- Tell them the name of the person who signed for the bat.
- OH! They'll call me back.
- Find out the Indy bat lab has been closed for a couple weeks for remodeling.
- Call Vet back and he's double livid. Doesn't know where any bats have gone for a couple weeks.
- Local media gets involved.
- Vet finds out Indy has been sending all bats to Kentucky for testing.
- I Google Kentucky Rabies Bat Lab and find a phone number.
- Call number and they tell me the head of the bat lab will call me back.
- Sure he will....
- Head of Kentucky bat lab calls me back and says they have our bat and will test it ASAP.
- Sure they will....
- Mr. Kentucky bat lab calls me back the next day and says it tested negative.
- Sigh of relief. Kentucky bat lab rocks!
- Call Vet. Thanks a lot.
- Call Humane Society. Thanks a lot.
- Call Health Department. You suck!
- Call local media. They report health department sucks.
Epilogue:
Two local families had to get rabies shots because they never found their bats. The procedure was changed to notify everyone of all results, positive or negative, of bat testing. Rabies is NOT curable. Get your pets vaccinated. Don't sleep with your bedroom doors open. Chances of contracting rabies from bat is low. Its blood or saliva has to get into your blood our saliva. Rabies virus dies fast with contact of air. If infected bat spits in your eye or open mouth or bites you (bites are extremely hard to detect), you could be infected. General rule of thumb... if your kids were sleeping unattended by an adult, and you found a bat in their room, its best to have it tested for rabies. If kids were awake, they'd probably know if they had contact with the bat. Chase the bat out of the house. Don't touch it if at all possible. Same thing applies to adults as kids. If you find that kids have been playing with a dead bat, you are screwed. Its probably too decomposed to test for rabies (they look at fresh brain tissue under a microscope) and you're kid should get shots. If you find a dead bat, don't handle it directly.
Enjoy! :laughing: