Last week it was my luck and great pleasure to stand by the side of a country road in deepening dusk, and watch perhaps 200 birds wheel and gyre for 3 1/2 minutes. They formed a wildly malleable globe, elongating on any axis at random, while moving on another axis. There was no single leader. Several times a bird would break out in a new direction, and his near neighbors follow, forming a pointed protuberance which however soon sank back into the mass. Real direction change seemed to be more of a mass decision, with all turning nearly together, and the lack of perfect sync causing the shape changes. I saw birds inside the globe sometimes going in quite a different direction, with no effect on the greater number. I do not clearly recall whether the apparent density was greater in the center (uniform blob of birds) or at the edges (hollow globe), but I think the latter.

At the end the flight pattern gradually lowered, accompanied with greatly increased chatter, then rather suddenly they all swooped to the cat tails below.

I think they were having a ball, drunk with the power of flight, sociability and life. Two days later they were gone, off South probably. Getting cold here.

Ol' Bab

On 12/9/2012 4:29 PM, mix...@bigpond.com wrote:
In reply to  Jed Rothwell's message of Sun, 9 Dec 2012 14:42:32 -0500:
Hi,
[snip]
However, their ability to respond with speed
and precision to signals from others members of the flock is astounding.
Like many other biological phenomena, it seems almost supernatural.
..they only need to follow the bird in front of them, while keeping their
position to the right or left behind, as the case may be. This way the motion of
the flock leader propagates back through the flock.

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html



Reply via email to