The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsSlept with a window open. Woke up with a bat in my kitchen
First real week of summer heat here so I try to cool the house off at night. Have screens in all the windows except one in the LR. Had that one up about 5-inches all night. Went in the kitchen this morning and there was a bat sleeping quite comfortably right above the door to the pantry (it's a 1920s house). Not sure if she is awake or asleep but she seemed quite comfortable there while I made breakfast and lunch. Fearless and docile so far.
I live on the edge of a 700,000-acre park so I get all kinds of visitors and residents. Got a family of birds under the eaves but all the other animals are unmarried. My house is like Noah's ark for the celibate. One groundhog, one rabbit, one chipmunk (adorable), the neighbor's cat. Around sunset it's like a Disney movie as they all forage in different sections of the yard. Two years ago, I put out some seed for the pair of birds which were feeding hatchlings and looked exhausted. They wouldn't touch it but an adolescent black bear promptly crushed my fence and scooped it up. Lesson learned.
Have a pair of grey catbirds that show up around sunset and sing their little hearts out. They are like Jazz musicians with ADHD.
Hoping the bat leaves tonight. I might make a bat house for her on one of my trees but I don't want her to get used to my kitchen.
hlthe2b
(114,692 posts)in the US and CDC reports over the past decades have shown incidences where individuals never even recalled a bite but did have bats in their home (or room for those taking place in long term care)**. This one sounds "normal" but one never knows. And even if your kind-heartedness makes you not want to heed my advice (and I understand that urge to protect wildlife, believe me), uninsured or underinsured costs for receiving human rabies prophylaxis runs into the many thousands$$ of dollars.
They are helpful animals to us in so many ways, so use your bat house--just don't have it close to your own.
LuckyCharms
(23,079 posts)GreatGazoo
(4,703 posts)Last edited Wed May 20, 2026, 04:07 PM - Edit history (1)
I plan to keep a screen in that window going forward. I deal with wild animals all the time here. That is a big part of why I live here.
Appreciate your concern but the risk is exceedingly low, especially if I leave it alone:
>"From 2015 to 2024, 17 cases of human rabies were documented,..."<
Source: https://www.cdc.gov/rabies/php/protecting-public-health/index.html
ETA: When I look through those cases, they all messed with the bat (eg killed it or thought it was dead and handled it) and did not seek treatment immediately after contact:
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/75/wr/mm7502a4.htm
hlthe2b
(114,692 posts)those with dementia, but sentient adults) never realized they had been exposed and a 99.9% fatality rate, I'd not be quite so dismissive. If I didn't care I'd blow you off, but I see this in my ER all the damned time. Years ago, local or state public health would step in to pay for/provide post-exposure prophylactic care--no more. The last uninsured person (three weeks ago) in my ER who was exposed to a dead rabid bat when the bag they'd scooped it up in broke and biologic debris contaminated an unrelated scratch on their hand will ultimately have to pay out more than $7,000, which is not unusual today.
Okay. I get it. I care about animals too and have had my fearless moments too, but damn if I am going to f...k around with potential rabies. At least call your local county or state public health department/animal control and see if they have safe recommendations for removal in case it doesn't fly back out that window tonight (or in case more arrive). Okay. I will say no more, but this is my field of expertise, so discount me as you wish.
EYESORE 9001
(29,889 posts)my wife would say, thats it. Burn the house down.
LastDemocratInSC
(4,253 posts)GreatGazoo
(4,703 posts)my house
MoonlightHillFarm
(93 posts)I occasionally have bats swooping in and around my house. I just open all the doors and they eventually swoop outside. They are very fast!
Laurelin
(959 posts)If i were you ( and I'm not) I'd call a wildlife rescue place to move the bar along, and call my doctor to arrange rabies vaccines. Forget all the horrid stories about the vaccine. Everyone in my family has done them and they're fine, in the arm, relatively painless.
The risk of rabies is indeed low but not something to take lightly when there's a nice prevention.
Laurelin
(959 posts)My daughter's entire veterinary class was required to get rabies vaccines before they started vet school. I'm pretty sure the risk from pets is much lower than the risk from bats. I have this hilarious story about how my school got a Guinness record for exposing the most people to rabies from a sick horse, but I'm to sick from chemo to type it. But believe me, vaccine good.
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