logo
Country diary: Some bats need a little help to get through the night

Country diary: Some bats need a little help to get through the night

The Guardian6 hours ago
I remove a crumpled leaf from the lawn, but it moves as I touch it, soft and solid, not dry and brittle. I yelp. It's a bat. I grab a gardening glove and pick it up, noting the huge, gossamer-thin ears, each nearly as long as its body. A brown long-eared bat, mouth open, tiny little teeth showing. It makes a buzzing noise at me.
The bat needs safety, so I find a cardboard box and try to drip a little water into its mouth. I leave it for half an hour in the shade, and when I come back, there is no movement. I think it's dead, but then the glazed open eye blinks – it's hanging on to life.
Last summer, I erected a microphone on a two-metre pole attached to a device that records the frequencies emitted by bats. I share my garden with noctules, long-eared bats and pipistrelles in surprising numbers.
I phone the Bat Conservation Trust helpline to seek advice. They're pleased that I wore gloves due to the risk of rabies. I'm given the number of some local volunteers, and soon Jane is on her way, returning from picking up a pipistrelle 40 miles away.
She arrives and also wonders if the bat is alive – but it is, and thirsty too, rousing to accept water from a pipette. Jane says it is a female and likely pregnant. She finds a wound on her body, probably from a cat, and a tiny hole in the wing, which shouldn't be problematic for future flight.
Jane will give her oral antibiotics, food and hydration – a chance to recover. She explains that lots of bats have needed help this year, possibly because the extended dryness is forcing them to fly lower to the ground to find insects, making them more vulnerable to predators. I get deeply attached to creatures I rescue, so I'm thrilled when my pregnant bat makes it through the night.
A week later, Jane gets in touch to say that, sadly, the bat has died. In response, I decide to improve my garden for bats: simple measures like avoiding pesticides, making sure it is unlit, and growing night‑flowering plants such as evening primrose and night‑scented stock to bring nocturnal pollinators for bats to eat.
Under the Changing Skies: The Best of the Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 is published by Guardian Faber; order at guardianbookshop.com and get a 15% discount
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dublin Zoo Run for Wildlife to become annual event in aid of threatened species
Dublin Zoo Run for Wildlife to become annual event in aid of threatened species

BreakingNews.ie

time8 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Dublin Zoo Run for Wildlife to become annual event in aid of threatened species

Dublin Zoo has announced that its Run for Wildlife will become an annual event in aid of threatened species worldwide. Held on July 26th, the run welcomed over 700 participants and raised an additional €3,500 in support of Selamatkan Yaki's work in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Advertisement Dublin Zoo's long-time conservation partner, Selamatkan Yaki, has become the programme's primary donor and lead advocate for the Critically Endangered Sulawesi crested macaque, or 'yaki'. Throughout the day, the event at Dublin Zoo also aimed to celebrate Indonesian culture and the importance of global biodiversity with the support of the Indonesian Irish Association and representatives from the Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia. The Sulawesi crested macaque, known for its jet-black coat and mohawk-like crest, can be seen in the Asian Forest habitat at Dublin Zoo. In the wild, just 4,000–6,000 individuals remain on the island of Sulawesi. The species is in rapid decline due to hunting, habitat loss, and the illegal pet trade. Advertisement Founder of Selamatkan Yaki, Prof Vicky Melfi, said: 'Selamatkan Yaki means 'Save the Yaki' in Indonesian, and our work is focused not only on protecting this unique species but also the forests they call home and the communities who depend on them. "To be chosen as the spotlight for Dublin Zoo's first-ever Run for Wildlife was incredibly meaningful for our entire team. It raised much-needed awareness of the yaki and its status as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, and it brought the story of this remarkable primate to a wider audience. "Dublin Zoo has been a valued partner for over a decade, and this deeper collaboration — both in terms of funding and shared outreach — is a powerful boost to our work on the ground in North Sulawesi. Together, we are helping to secure a future for the yaki in the wild.' Senior conservation and science officer at Dublin Zoo, Dr Andrew Mooney, said: 'This strengthened partnership with Selamatkan Yaki is incredibly important to all of us at Dublin Zoo. Advertisement "For over a decade, we've been supporting efforts to save the Sulawesi crested macaque - an intelligent, charismatic, and Critically Endangered species only found in North Sulawesi. "Now, as their primary donor and dedicated conservation partner, we're working closer than ever with the Selamatkan Yaki team, deepening our commitment to protecting this extraordinary species and their forest home. "It's a powerful reminder that conservation is a shared effort, and that together, we can make a difference for wildlife.'

Belfast Zoo: Closure due 'maintenance issue' with water supply
Belfast Zoo: Closure due 'maintenance issue' with water supply

BBC News

time9 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Belfast Zoo: Closure due 'maintenance issue' with water supply

An on-site water supply issue has been blamed for Belfast Zoo closing its doors for a second follows the zoo previously being closed due to an outbreak last month. The zoo said on Sunday, it was closed for essential maintenance added that a team would be on-site as normal, ensuring all animals continue to receive the "highest standard of care and have everything they need". The zoo also apologised for any inconvenience caused for those with pre-booked tickets and advised them to contact them for a refund.

tiktok-days-from-hell-trend-things-everyone-hates
tiktok-days-from-hell-trend-things-everyone-hates

The Guardian

time9 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

tiktok-days-from-hell-trend-things-everyone-hates

Do we agree what a bad day looks like? TikTokers have been describing their low-key 'days from hell' – and it has made me wonder. Mine would involve getting up before 5am after a sleepless night to find a 'morning person' house guest already in the kitchen, drinking the last of the coffee from my special mug and wanting to talk politics. Trying to work, I'd face a soundscape of nearby pneumatic drilling and Capital FM, and be regularly interrupted by spam calls from 'HMRC'. After an afternoon at the dentist, dinner would be plain farfalle (the worst pasta). I'd have to go out in the evening by car and parallel park, then get home to realise I'd lost my keys. Would that bother anyone else? Or is the small stuff people sweat – and it is small, truly the definition of first world problems – entirely personal? Conducting a survey (that is, watching many TikToks of dewy young people pointing to bullet-pointed lists in their notes apps) revealed a few commonalities. A very high proportion of their annoying days start with waking up in someone else's house, hungover, which does, I agree, sound suboptimal. The TikTokers also really hate being hot, which is probably a function of when this trend is emerging (ask them in January and I suspect you'd get a different answer), but relatable. Forgotten or unwelcome social plans that can't be cancelled without guilt, technological snafus and exercise classes too expensive to skip also recurred regularly. After that, the consensus crumbles. Everyone has their own loathed chores, modes of transport or parts of town: there's a beautiful specificity to the likes of getting into platform 16 at Leeds station, a Hinge date booking 'Caffè Concerto in Piccadilly Circus' or 'shopping for a present for a six-year-old boy in Westfield Stratford'. But one thing seems to unite TikTok and, I suspect, everyone beyond: that there is no mild discomfort like a mobile phone with less than 10% juice and no charger.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store