When I learnt, that as a novice, I could listen to and identify the Bats that visit our garden each night it fired up the realisation that there really are some amazing Bat species here in the UK and that there are ways of getting closer to them whilst at the same time do something to help conserve their habitats.

When I found the Bat Conservation Trust online I was thrilled to read the open and honest articles and I felt refreshed by the way that the site encourages you to get involved with surveys, walks and conservation work. There are many Trusts where you are unable to make such a huge contribution just by offering a little of your time and that even simply just counting Bats in and out of a local roost can provide significant statistical data.
Coming soon on the Bat Yarns blog ...... Putting the ‘Barns’ into ‘Bats, Barns and Nocturnal Yarns’ : My first visit to the Manchester Airport Bat Barns with the Cheshire Bat Group.
After joining the BCT and the CBG, I ordered and received my Magenta Bat4 Detector. As I said in my earlier blog, I have gone for an entry level detector because I don’t want to be 'hand held' by the technology from the get-go. I want to learn from the ground upwards. As a Trainer by nature, I like to start at the beginning and build up from there; that way if you are ever going to educate other beginners you can do so knowing the basic information that will give them a good start to help nurture their growing interest.
Every night since, I have popped into the garden and listened for our nightly visitors and I can safely say that my Bat4 is not letting me down! It picks these little creatures up from quite a range and also from behind or to the side of you. You do need a direct location to really hear the frequency and type of sound that the bat/s are making, but I often hear a bat behind me which I would otherwise had missed if I was just reliant on my eyes.
We’ve also been taking the dog for some late evening walks - which he finds the wait for a little frustrating! But the field that we normally walk him on comes alive at dusk with the Bats doing purposeful figures of eight over our heads and we can see them darting in and out of the tree lined hedging. A walk through the cemetery always provides the opportunity to practise tuning the sounds of the Bats because they are regular and plentiful in passes.
I now take my Bat detector with me wherever I go, especially when I know I will be out come nightfall. Walking the dog and even a cheeky outside-beer at the pub has brought to life the Bats that we would never have noticed before. Even the little stream on the way into town had me transfixed for over half an hour as I got to hear a different species of Bat to that on the field. The dog didn’t quite understand the hold up that night but he seems to be getting used to my stops and starts now.
I’ve also been videoing some of the passes that we’ve encountered. This helps me keep a record of the frequency my 'Bat4' was set to and also helps me ‘remember’ the type of sounds we were hearing. This I find really useful (as a beginner) because I can then compare my sounds with those on the BCT Sounds file pages.
Bat Conservation Trust: http://www.bats.org.uk/
Cheshire Bat Group: http://www.record-lrc.co.uk/c1.aspx?Mod=Article&ArticleID=G00020001Magenta
(Bat Detectors) : http://www.magenta2000.co.uk/
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