Going Batty? Here's How to Get Rid of Bats in Your House
Published: October 21, 2011
Winged creatures invading your home would drive anyone batty. Here's how to get rid of them.
Thanks to dark tales of Count Dracula, bats suffer a bad rap. I know these creatures aren’t really out to bite my neck, but the time I discovered a small bat fluttering around our house, all my Midwestern moxie melted away.
My heroic husband came running, sensing something amiss. Perhaps it was my shrieks of “Bat! Bat! Bat in the house!”
Wielding a piece of window screen like a medieval shield, he began “herding” the bat toward the front door. I followed, shrieking unintelligibly. That’s when he calmly put down the screen and herded me to the garage — much to my humiliation. He did eventually get the bat out of the house, all without my “helpful” vocalizations.
After the incident (and with a calmer perspective), I asked renowned bat expert Rob Mies if bats have any benefit to home owners. I found out they are nature’s answer to pest control.
“One bat can consume 2,000 to 5,000 insects each night,” he says. “You can encourage bats to dwell on your property — not in your house — by building a bat house.”
You can find free plans for building a bat house online. Placement of the bat house is important too, so check out those guidelines.
So what should you do if a bat makes a debut in your den? Mies suggests these four steps:
Every had bats in your belfry? How did you get rid of them?
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