HAPPY NEW WEEK!
Everyone have a wonderful week!
It"s definitely autumn here, and the weather is turning chilly. Over 600 million birds have flown over Indiana during this migration season. 233,600 crossed the full length of the state last night. The scientists use weather radar to track the birds. The birds appear differently from the rain/sleet/snow on the radar. So, the bird data can be separated from the weather data and analyzed.
https://dashboard.birdcast.info/region/US-IN
Below is an interesting article showing how the researchers use weather radar to identify the species, direction, and numbers of birds on migration.
https://birdcast.info/about/weather-surveillance-radar-and-bird-migration-primer/
I haven't seen any reporting on the fate of the tropical flamingos that ended up in the Midwest, including Indiana. I'm hoping they saw the birds migrating and joined a flock of other large birds, such as the white pelicans that migrate through my state.
Hugs to all.
Unknown said:I haven't seen any reporting on the fate of the tropical flamingos that ended up in the Midwest, including Indiana. I'm hoping they saw the birds migrating and joined a flock of other large birds, such as the white pelicans that migrate through my state.
I'm keeping everything crossed that this is the case, Diane.
What a fantastic number of migrating birds. I wonder if any scientists do that here? My part of the country gets some wonderful sightings in each migration season and you'd have thought someone would be keeping count.
Our herring gulls are red listed birds. Think about that the next time you hear some flaming idiot calling for a cull of them.
Unknown said:We saw the eclipse this morning with our handy eclipse "glasses." It was brilliant. We rushed out when it started at 8 a.m., then at regular intervals until it reached it peak of 80% (in this part of the country) What was really weird was how it affected shadows. When we held out our hands, the shadows were blurred and rather spooky - almost like an x-ray image. No clouds in the sky, but it was definitely chillier as the eclipse progressed. Very thrilling!
Sounds great! Believe it or not I've never seen a total eclipse, which is a shame as that's something I'd like to experience.
Have a safe journey home. I couldn't agree more about the LA traffic!
Heather B said:Meantime, have to take blood pressure twice daily and text the results to the surgery. Suffice to say that it is very low and I have had several fainting episodes
Limpy had a period of that a few years ago. He was prescribed midodrine, which worked spectacularly well. You might suggest this to the doctors when they've worked out what's going on.