Silly Goose

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  • #590001
    feivel
    Participant

    If you’ve ever seen a bicycle race, you might have noticed the riders lining up behind each other in straight columns.

    Bicycle racers spend much of their energy overcoming wind resistance, so this lining up makes good sense. If you ride directly behind your opponent, he’ll cut through the air resistance for you, letting you save up energy for the finish line. What’s true for bicycle racers is true for other things too. Going in straight line formation is the best way to overcome wind resistance.

    Which brings us to those silly geese. Like bicycle racers, geese fly in formation mainly to save energy. The formation they prefer however is shaped like the letter “V.” What’s going on? Are geese just plain dumb?

    Geese don’t only need to worry about air resistance—they need to stay aloft as well.

    Lift, however, is a peculiar thing. While most of it tugs upward on the goose, some of it spills away from the wing tips as a kind of updraft. This lingering updraft spreads out behind the goose in a V-shape like the wake of a boat. If another goose puts its wings inside this updraft wake, it gets an added upward boost itself. What’s the best formation to take advantage of this? It’s not a straight line, it’s a “V”!

    really, it should be “rocket scientist” goose, not silly goose. if i were to become a goose for a day, i would have no idea where the best place was to line up behind the goose in front of me. thats because i am not a goose(no comments please). HaKodeshBarch gave each one of his millions of types of creatures EXACTLY what they need to function for their mission.including a tremendous number of preprogrammed behavior patterns and responses. the geese didnt figure it out. and there was no mutation (birth defect) that reorganized the billions of neural connections in their central nervous system to order their senses, perceptions and complex behavioral patterns to enable them to behave in this fashion.

    #649991

    feivel-

    Very interesting.

    Migrating birds actually take turns leading the flock so no individual bird gets tired out.

    Also, ski-jumpers relatively recently started putting their skis in a “V” while in mid-air rather than the traditional parallel-ski pose because it turned out the “V” cut down on air resistance.

    #649992
    feivel
    Participant

    thank you icot for the further information

    #649993
    d a
    Member

    feivel, do you write all this??? Did you read “Our Amazing World” or did you write it?

    #649994
    feivel
    Participant

    da i sometimes paraphrase, sometimes i copy and heavily edit, sometimes i copy or paraphrase from a few places and join it together. i dont usually completely write from scratch.

    i never had Our Amazing World” in mind when i started this, but a did read it and probably was influenced by its style. thanks for the compliment

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