Wednesday, 31 July 2024

The Trouble with Tribbles, floaters and bats out of Meat Loaf

 I do not know when I first became interested in bats. Here is an early photo

of a Fledermaus in our garden:


These bats are regular visitors every summer and are easy to see against the twilight sky.

Their flight is quite regular, predictable and so I preset the focus for the gap in the trees and waited.. The date is probably June 2007 when I had just started digital still photography with a Pentax. NRW, Germany.


My next encounter that I recall was with Rory in Quetico at the east end of the portage from  Russel Lake into Chatterton. Rory actually heard the bat and located it in a low hollow in a broken tree trunk. I do not know if we unpacked cameras to document it.

In May 1, 2011 Vicki and I observed a large brown bat from our balcony:




In 2017 we saw more bats in Yucatan - here just a few daytime examples:


These were taken in November, I was able to follow one to its roost in a palm tree:





I think it is eating a butterfly.


In 2018, during our stay in Killarney Provincial Park we met researchers from the University of Manitoba who were studying the effects of heating bat roosts:


The following year, 2019,  a bat box was installed a few meters away from this cabin:





The next year, May 20, 2020 I saw a bat flying over the North River during early afternoon. The camera and I could not focus quickly enough, sadly:





Trail cameras have been used to "detect" bats in unexpected ways, for example:




From on high:


 And in the dark:



These last 4 photos are from EL with my thanks.

 

The following is the best I could manage this year with a still new camera, the Nikon P1000, Hope some day to do better. 



Still have floaters - probably moths -




But the "big stuff" might be bats?





Vicki was pointing the antenna and signally to me when there was a strong kHz signal, at which time I would fire the flash with focus on manual. There appear to be "angels" running! Well, maybe flying.


WOB


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