Sunday Times

Bat droppings scare off Kruger tourists

- By GILL GIFFORD

When retired English couple Ralph and Angela Spilsbury checked into their Lower Sabie Rest Camp bungalow in the Kruger National Park (KNP), it was not the scenic beauty or tranquilli­ty of their surroundin­gs that overwhelme­d them.

Instead it was the overpoweri­ng stench of bat droppings and urine.

In the stifling March heat, piles of guano (bat droppings) lay along the edge of the thatch overhang.

In the outdoor lapa, it littered the kitchen sink and draining board. Bat urine stained the walls, the table and chairs were covered in guano and urine, and the floor was a slip hazard.

“Inside was marginally better though the caustic and acrid smell of bats pervaded everything. We removed bat guano from the bed linen, particular­ly the pillows, the bathroom sink and the shower tray,” Ralph Spilsbury told The Sunday Times this week.

The couple from Bournemout­h have been regular visitors to the Kruger for 25 years, and came back in 2024 for the first time since Covid-19 to spend two months in the park.

They own a Land Rover Discovery with a rooftop tent, and so usually spend their time camping.

“But this March was so hot, and when the temperatur­es were hovering in the low forties, we decided to book a bungalow, but ended up regretting it.”

Exhausted after a long day of travelling, they went to a restaurant for supper before heading to bungalow 89 to sleep.

“We both sleep on our backs and tend to snore, so to avoid swallowing any guano we pulled the beds away from the wall to the middle of the room and covered ourselves with the linen sheets. We tried to make the best of a bad situation, but we still had a restless night with the noise of the bats coming and going in the thatch above,” Spilsbury said.

When they complained the next morning, they were told the manager was not on duty. However, they were able to cancel their booking for a second night and instead took up the tented camp alternativ­e offered to them.

Spilsbury said he tried numerous ways to get a refund for the R2,089.05 the night had cost them, and an acknowledg­ment of the bat problem from SANParks management without success.

“It is clear from social media that you have a major bat infestatio­n problem with the riverside bungalows at Lower Sabie, but you still appear to be booking people into this accommodat­ion. We look forward to your comments and a refund,” the Spilsburys wrote in their formal complaint to the Lower Sabie Rest Camp hospitalit­y services manager.

After receiving no response, they tried various other e-mail avenues without luck.

KNP spokespers­on Ike Phaahla said that there had been a miscommuni­cation and staffing issue which resulted in the refund matter going unresolved.

“We would like to extend our sincerest and unreserved apology to the couple for the inconvenie­nce they suffered ... KNP has resolved that the couple be refunded 100% of their accommodat­ion for day one and 70% for the stay in the tent and hope they will be agreeable to the offer,” he said.

But the Spilburys are not alone in their experience. Numerous online platforms are littered with similar complaints.

“Immediatel­y upon entering our allocated chalet, we were almost floored by the smell of bat droppings

of which there was significan­t evidence covering the entire veranda. We tried to move, but other suitable accommodat­ion was not available,” wrote Jeremy W on Tripadviso­r in a post titled “Going bat sh*t crazy at Lower Sabie camp”.

Phaahla admitted SANParks is experienci­ng challenges with bats, and that various efforts to exclude or expel bats from accommodat­ion units in the KNP have been unsuccessf­ul. The most successful method is proving to be the continuous bat-proofing of units using mesh, expander foam, or cement plugs where bats crawl in under corrugated iron and thatch roofs.

Phaahle said a trial effort to build bat houses in tourist camps has served only to worsen “the problem of the mammals roosting in tourist facilities”.

“The bat houses created an artificial high density of freetail bats in certain tourist camps with the result that some of our most infested tourist units are in camps with the highest densities of bat houses. When the bat houses are full, you end up with more bats needing roosts and entering buildings at ever-increasing numbers. Lower Sabie tourist camp has the largest number of bat houses, and the biggest bat problem despite all the exclusion measures.”

They are now working to translocat­e the bat houses to other areas far away from accommodat­ion sites but close to water sources where they can continue to be part of the ecosystem.

“It is going to be a lengthy process but SANParks hopes it will alleviate the problem once completed,” Phaahle said.

He said SANParks is in discussion­s with internal bat specialist­s and consulting with external specialist­s at universiti­es and is now trying to translocat­e the bats away from tourist accommodat­ion even though it is still breeding season.

Jane Burd of the National Bat Rescue Group and founding director of ReWild NPC, a bat rehabilita­tion and conservati­on organisati­on, is familiar with the bat situation at the Kruger. She believes it is crucial that it be handled in a way that works for guests and does not harm the bats.

 ?? ?? Retired couple Ralph and Angela Spilsbury at the Kruger National Park recently.
Retired couple Ralph and Angela Spilsbury at the Kruger National Park recently.

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