Cars RSS Feed


Vintage cars in the firing line of resident bats


EVERY evening, staff at a Hampshire tourist attraction take part in a bizarre guessing game.

Employees at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu, try to work out which of the historic cars are likely to be damaged during the night by bats living in the roof.

About 100 bats are thought to have taken up residence in a replica of a 1930s garage in the main exhibition hall.

At night they fly out and leave their calling card on some of the cars on show, damaging the paintwork.

Staff attempt to protect the collection by covering vehicles beneath the creatures’ flightpath – but choosing the right ones is driving them batty.

Cars in the danger zone include a Sunbeam that set a new land speed record of 129mph an hour in 1922.

Museum attendant Andrew Farr said: “We do what we can but we don’t know where the bats will go.”

A spokesman said: “If it be-comes a huge problem we might have to see if the bats can be moved but it’s a long process and has to be done in a controlled way.”


Comments(1)

BrixtonSaint says...
5:49pm Wed 3 Jun 09

This is the fifth story I've read and the fifth to have unbelievably woeful spelling and grammatical errors. Who is writing this stuff? Christ, did anyone actually achieve their NCTJ qualifications or English 'O'level, excuse me GCSE come to think of it?
Since when did become sprout a hyphen?
Get these bats in the Echo offices the amount of sh1t they produce can't be any worse than what's written here.


Attendant Andrew Farr covering the cars he believes may be in the flight path of the bats who have roosted at the Beaulieu Motor Museum.Echo picture by Stuart Martin. Order no: 8667635 Attendant Andrew Farr covering the cars he believes may be in the flight path of the bats who have roosted at the Beaulieu Motor Museum.Echo picture by Stuart Martin. Order no: 8667635

Most popular






Local Information

Enter your postcode, town or place name

House prices »   Schools »   Crime »   Hospitals »

Local Businesses