Here Be Monsters

HBM095: The Bats that Stay


Listen Later

Not all migratory bats migrate.  We don’t know why some choose to stay behind at their summer roosts.  But according to the University of Washington’s Sharlene Santana, the bats that stay tend to die.  

Content Note:
Fleeting language

In this episode, HBM host Jeff Emtman attempts to make a metaphor about bats and humans.  Perhaps it’s anthropomorphic, perhaps it’s unnecessarily poetic, or perhaps it’s a fair one.  

Jeff leaves his home in Seattle to move cross-country to Boston.  Along the way he takes a five day layover in Colorado to meet up with an old friend (Helen Katich) and her girlfriend (Laura Goldhamer).  The three drive from Denver to the San Luis Valley of Central Colorado.  They visit Valley View Hot Springs and walk to the mouth of an abandoned iron mine 10,000 feet above sea level called “The Glory Hole.”  

The Glory Hole houses an estimated 250,000 Mexican free-tailed bats each summer.  These bats migrate in from Central and South America to eat bugs and raise their pups.  They fly together at dusk in gatherings visually similar to the murmurations of starlings.   This bat species, also known as the Brazilian free-tailed bat, is extremely social, and perhaps nature’s most gregarious mammal species.  

Despite this, their social and hunting calls are completely inaudible to humans.  They produce ultrasounds, sounds too high pitched for human ears. But some audio equipment (see below) can still record these sounds, then computer algorithms can pitch them down into human-audible sounds.  

One evening, Jeff and Helen and Laura hike to the mouth of the mine.  At this vantage point, they watch some of the bats flying out and Jeff manages to record some of their loud, ultrasonic vocalizations, before the storm forces them back downhill.  The next day, Jeff flies to his new home in Boston.

Jeff recorded the bat calls in this episode with a Tascam DR100MK3 at 192kHZ sample rate and an Echo Meter Touch 2 Pro at sample rates of 256kHZ and 384kHZ.  The calls were recorded at frequencies of approximately 21kHZ to 36kHZ and time/pitch-shifted with Elastique 3.2.3 Pro.

Producer: Jeff Emtman
Editor: Bethany Denton
Music: The Black Spot and Laura Goldhamer

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Here Be MonstersBy Here Be Monsters

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

1,228 ratings


More shows like Here Be Monsters

View all
Radiolab by WNYC Studios

Radiolab

43,969 Listeners

This American Life by This American Life

This American Life

90,949 Listeners

Radio Diaries by Radio Diaries & Radiotopia

Radio Diaries

1,246 Listeners

Snap Judgment by Snap Judgment and PRX

Snap Judgment

11,537 Listeners

the memory palace by Nate DiMeo

the memory palace

6,845 Listeners

Criminal by Vox Media Podcast Network

Criminal

37,377 Listeners

The Kitchen Sisters Present by The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

The Kitchen Sisters Present

1,270 Listeners

Imaginary Worlds by Eric Molinsky | QCODE

Imaginary Worlds

1,992 Listeners

Nocturne by Vanessa Lowe

Nocturne

1,281 Listeners

Lore by Aaron Mahnke

Lore

44,919 Listeners

Spooked by KQED and Snap Studios

Spooked

16,398 Listeners

Endless Thread by WBUR

Endless Thread

2,663 Listeners

This is Love by Vox Media Podcast Network

This is Love

9,334 Listeners

Decoder Ring by Slate Podcasts

Decoder Ring

2,079 Listeners

The Atlas Obscura Podcast by SiriusXM and Atlas Obscura

The Atlas Obscura Podcast

1,675 Listeners