
The bats were inside the chimney earlier this spring/summer. Since this was during bat season, and there would be no way to "hand remove" the young, we waited until this week to exclude them. During that time, we closed off the chimney opening on the inside of the house. Once that was done, I think it moved them all the way up to the top of the chimney -- I'm assuming maybe because the air currents on the inside of the chimney changed when the inside was closed off.
anyways -- the roof around the chimney was compromised due to being an older house with severe water damage on the roof decking (rafters were still good). Original plan was to rent a boom and fix the chimney cap. After I got over there with a boom, I realized I had overlooked 1 important detail -- the entrance cable was right where I needed to put the boom -- so that axed that idea -- luckily the rental company did not charge me for it -- i WILL be doing buisness with them again.
So now what?? Hope you have a friend who is a brick mason and has scaffolding and you can talk him into giving a hand and some equipment. So we set the scaffolding up, and when I got to the chimney, we found out that all the bats were under the chimney cap on the outside. Being that high up on a walk board and trying to dodge 50 - 75 big browns flying out from under a chimney cap sucks!!!
So, what was learned here. I like the scaffolding better than the lift for a job like this even though it is more labor intensive -- why -- because It don't jerk around and get blown around by the wind like a lift, and I can put it up where I need it. It also doesn't cost the homeowner what 2 to 3 days of lift rental would--and I don't have to worry about a lift not reaching where I need to get. I can charge for the setup/removal of the scaffolding and that $$ goes to me and hired help instead of to the rental company, and it will usually save the homeowner some $$$. I also learned that I don't like bat removal that much -- most of the jobs I have had have been a real pain in the @$$. I also learned that I way underbid this job--not necissarily a bad thing, I will just be better prepared the next time. Luckily I had a few folks to help me out with the scaffolding and the homeowner was really understanding -- they were to the point they just wanted them gone--and i still came out ok and gained some valuable experience and did not loose $$.