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A few years ago we would see several flying around our camp in Rome at dusk. I do still have ONE resident bat that lives in the crack between the joints near our front door light. I can see him peeking out right now.
Margaret Viens
Rome
Sent from my iPhone
Sent from my iPhone
Ditto!Here on MSI there were never many but always a steady, resident population. Now they are none.Until a couple years ago, I never saw a single mosquito on the island and over 16 summers, I only heard tell of one or two sightings. Now you absolutely must Deet-up if you go near long vegetation, mow the lawn or just spend much time outside.Compounding things here, there are virtually no other mosquito eating critters on the island.It's pretty much the same story throughout my home range of South Western New Brunswick. (The whole Eastern Seaboard, I guess).--On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 11:05 PM, rob speirs <rspeirs1@gmail.com> wrote:Hello Folks,--Sitting on the float tonight watching the full moon rise on the eastern horizon I was struck by the total absence of the familiar squeaks of bats.We've always had bats at camp. At dusk we would see them in erratic flight, in front of the porch and over the float on the waterfront. Sometimes we would, to the dismay of many, find them fluttering about inside our camp.When we were young there were so many, we could sit quietly on the float with a long handled fishing net, and wait patiently for one of the many bats to come close. With a quick flip of the net, by the most articulate, we would capture a bat.They were put into a large glass jugs, with a long diagonal stick and leaves. The jugs were of the kind which we used to carry water from the spring, the wire handles on full jugs practically cutting off our young fingers, or so it seemed. I'm confident some of you remember those days.The bats were released the next day, unharmed, after camp friends came to ooh and ahh over our treasures.Tonight, not a squeak, not a sighting.. nothing. Up until 2 years ago we had a bat(s) roosting up under the roof of camp's back porch, their droppings a nuisance to sweep away every morning. As much as we were unhappy about the droppings, we were more unhappy about the absence of bats. White nose fungus is, apparently, the culprit.Let's hope this is cyclical and our mosquito eating friends recover. What has been your experience???Rob
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