Bats in My Belfry
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I was sitting on my front patio
talking with my gardener, Leo, when a velvety brown bat fluttered between us
and landed in a hollow metal rafter supporting the patio roof.
Ah, I had wondered if bats might be moving
in. This morning there were figs on the floor below the bat perch. (Figs in
full, figs in processed form, but identifiable by seeds.)
Several neighbors have false fig trees which drop a nasty
fruit, not a true fig. Bats haul these fruits to their perches but drop some
along the way. Operative word, drop. The tree is majestic. The fruit is messy,
squishy, and leaves a nasty stain.
That is not the worst thing, of course. Bat guano in any form
is stinky. None of us want to provide a home for a colony of bats, who love
nothing more than to perch beneath our patio roofs, dropping messes below.
Fortunately there is an easy solution. We leave a night light
burning. Some of my neighbors have designated bat lights which are never turned
off. I have discovered that three or four nights of light will deter the critters
homesteading urge.
On the other side of my house, my mango tree is loaded with
fruit ready to harvest.
Previously, I have bought mangoes from roadside stands, even
venturing as far as Tequila for the best fruits. I like the smaller yellow fruits,
sweeter and juicier, original local fruits whose genetic structure has not been
altered for size and shipping.
Four summers ago, I planted a small mango tree in my yard. This
year, the first year to bear fruit, the branches bow almost to the ground, so
heavily laden that Leo made teepee poles, like crutches, to support the weight.
Every morning I fondle the fruit, urging it to ripen.
Time for me to sterilize jelly jars and stir pots of chopped
mango and sugar until the simmering soup jells into glistening golden
marmelada.
Cousin Nancie is here for two weeks respite from drizzling
Washington gloom. Pat stayed home to tinker with his prize-winning vintage auto.
Unlike ever-present drizzle in Washington, our rain falls mostly at night,
leaving hours of glorious sunshine, a wonderful plan in my opinion.
Nancie said one reason she planned this trip is so she and I
may spend time together. Though she and Pat are here for several months of
winter, everyone else is also here. Consequently, it seems we seldom get to
have privacy, just us.
Conversation is different when it is shared among several; it
simply is different. So we have been making the most of these few days, often
heading into town for intimate chats over breakfast. Communion.
Tonight I’ll leave my patio light off. I hope the bats have
moved on, have found a place more to their liking, somewhere with a welcome
mat.
Remember Jimmy Durante? He ended his
programs shrugging into his topcoat, hat on his head, throwing a kiss, wishing
all a good night with a special, “Good night, Mrs. Calabash, wherever you are.”
While I am not talented as Jimmy
Durante, own neither the topcoat nor the hat, nor the schnozz, thank you, I
wish to express “A special good night to Mrs. C. She knows where and who she
is.” Inka dinka dinka dinka do.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
July 18,
2019
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