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IRiSHMaFIA Admin
Joined: 29 Apr 2006
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Posted: Sat Nov 11, 2006 7:32 am Post subject: Holy infestation! Georgia town goes bat crazy |
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AMERICUS, Georgia (AP) -- The grand historic mansions of this Southern town have become infested with millions of bats -- so many that the sky turns black with each sunset. So many that not even the neighborhood Batman can help.
"This town is in bad shape," said George Perkins, a professional bat remover who often makes public appearances in the caped crusader's costume and drives his own Batmobile, a retro-styled Chrysler Prowler with bat emblems.
But homeowners are not laughing.
The bat problem began about a decade ago and got steadily worse as the number of the little furry beasts grew. Perkins alone cannot do the job anymore, and now the state has promised to help, proposing a yearlong program to capture and move the flying mammals to "bat houses" where they will no longer be a nuisance.
"They're perpetual crap machines," said Tripp Pomeroy, who spent $1,500 trying to evict bats from the attic of his 96-year-old home in Americus, a town of 17,000 people 116 miles south of Atlanta.
Bats are the leading cause of human rabies in the United States, and that makes Pomeroy reluctant to let his children sleep in their upstairs bedrooms.
Many of the bats have settled into the town's historic district, known for its antebellum and Greek Revival mansions built in the 1800s, and Victorian homes from the early 1900s. Many of the homes have white columns, wide porches and other touches that look like something straight out of "Gone with the Wind."
The homes "are like art," said Deanna Burgess, who recently moved into a house built in 1856. "They need to be brought back and preserved for future generations."
They were not meant to shelter free-tailed bats which normally dwell in caves in Texas and farther west. But over the past three decades, the creatures have flown into the Southeast.
Americus seems like a good spot to the bats because because it has an unusually large number of old houses, which are not as well sealed as new homes and have plenty of crevices in their attics for sneaking in.
The bats swarm out in the evening, helping to curb the insect population by eating mosquitoes and other pests. But as the sun comes up, they return to their dark attic lairs, where they urinate and leave piles of droppings.
"In some areas, the odor is unbearable on hot summer days," said Lane Tyson, 26, who fights to keep bats out of his early-1900s home.
Residents are not allowed to kill the bats because they are protected under Georgia law. Killing even one carries up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.
So homeowners try to keep them out by plugging openings in their homes. But that is often a futile task, since bats can squeeze through holes as small as a dime.
Those who can afford professional help call Perkins, who founded his company, Bat Busters, in the early 1990s, when a young woman died from rabies after she touched bats that flew into her office. Perkins refers to his offices as "Bat Caves," and callers hear the theme from the "Batman" TV series while on hold.
Perkins uses sealant and wire mesh to close gaps and create one-way doors that let the bats out but not in. He also crawls into the bat roosting areas.
"In one house alone, I estimated 10,000 in the attic," said Perkins, 56.
Once, he found a layer of bat feces eight inches deep.
From 1990 to 2005, 31 of the 39 reported cases of human rabies were linked to bats, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Because bats have tiny teeth, people may not even realize they have been bitten. Humans also can get rabies from a bat scratch or bat saliva. The disease can be fatal without anti-rabies shots. In humans, that means six shots over 30 days.
Perkins said he has been bitten often and has been a frequent recipient of the rabies vaccine.
After years of frustration, homeowners sought help from state officials. The Department of Natural Resources proposed a plan that includes training city workers to remove bats and erecting bat houses, which resemble bird houses and can hold hundreds of bats.
"We recognize that bats provide a valuable ecological service by consuming vast quantities of night-flying insects, many of which are significant pests to farmers and homeowners," said Mike Harris, the state's top wildlife official.
"However, we certainly don't expect people to tolerate bats roosting in their homes and businesses."
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Is that your brother under that mask using an assumed name faceless? He said he was in London hmmmmm |
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faceless admin
Joined: 25 Apr 2006
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Posted: Sat Nov 11, 2006 11:00 am Post subject: Re: Holy infestation! Georgia town goes bat crazy |
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IRiSHMaFIA wrote: |
Is that your brother under that mask using an assumed name faceless? He said he was in London hmmmmm |
he's more likely to be helping the bats than trying to evict them! |
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