It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by ISis12RA12ELohim
reply to post by HunkaHunka
I made a thread about this very same thing AND posted a video, it just seemed so unusual to me, their behavior, I took the video below, after 3 days of this activity, let me know if what you saw is anything like the video I took:
Here is the link to my thread: www.abovetopsecret.com...
Originally posted by HunkaHunka
Originally posted by ISis12RA12ELohim
reply to post by HunkaHunka
I made a thread about this very same thing AND posted a video, it just seemed so unusual to me, their behavior, I took the video below, after 3 days of this activity, let me know if what you saw is anything like the video I took:
Here is the link to my thread: www.abovetopsecret.com...
If i might be so bold i think the word you are looking for is "vortex" they looked like they were flying in a vortex, not linear,,
Actually in my experience earlier today, the geese were flying almost in a circle... where as yours all seem to be going in one direction, mine were like being spun about a drain, before finally forming up a V formation and heading northwest
Officials in Mount Vernon are struggling to stay on top of a massive bird invasion. They say there are at least 50,000 birds living in the area. Officials have now set up a bird committee, headed up by water department head Chuck Gray to get rid of the birds by spring. Gray is using chargers that make loud noises, chargers that shoot out sparks to chase the birds, and even a bird cannon. He says the measures are working to clear out the pesky crows, but now blackbirds are a new problem swooping in on the east end of town. Gray says he's not surprised that all kinds of birds keep picking Posey County to land. "They basically have an unlimited food supply, with the trash cans, the 55 pound burn bins we use for trash cans in town, and then we have corn on one side and soybeans on the other side." Resident Edward Lowery says he's glad to hear the city is taking measures to clear the birds out, but he thinks they need to be moving faster. He says in the past three months, blackbird droppings have covered his back patio and the incessant chirping has kept him awake at night. One of his neighbors, Chris Cartwright, agrees. Cartwright says, "It's a health hazard, you know the children they go outside and play, and they get into the bird droppings and everybody knows birds carry diseases." That's why she says she's happy to hear the bird cannon boom, and hopes it will bring some much needed relief, and soon. City officials say it's not really feasible to kill the birds because they would need to be shot down in mass and then cleaned up, making it both messier and more expensive.
Originally posted by onthelookout
An incident on RSOE EDIS in Mt Vernon, Indiana USA regarding a "massive bird invasion".
Officials in Mount Vernon are struggling to stay on top of a massive bird invasion. They say there are at least 50,000 birds living in the area. Officials have now set up a bird committee, headed up by water department head Chuck Gray to get rid of the birds by spring. Gray is using chargers that make loud noises, chargers that shoot out sparks to chase the birds, and even a bird cannon. He says the measures are working to clear out the pesky crows, but now blackbirds are a new problem swooping in on the east end of town. Gray says he's not surprised that all kinds of birds keep picking Posey County to land. "They basically have an unlimited food supply, with the trash cans, the 55 pound burn bins we use for trash cans in town, and then we have corn on one side and soybeans on the other side." Resident Edward Lowery says he's glad to hear the city is taking measures to clear the birds out, but he thinks they need to be moving faster. He says in the past three months, blackbird droppings have covered his back patio and the incessant chirping has kept him awake at night. One of his neighbors, Chris Cartwright, agrees. Cartwright says, "It's a health hazard, you know the children they go outside and play, and they get into the bird droppings and everybody knows birds carry diseases." That's why she says she's happy to hear the bird cannon boom, and hopes it will bring some much needed relief, and soon. City officials say it's not really feasible to kill the birds because they would need to be shot down in mass and then cleaned up, making it both messier and more expensive.
It's being suggested that this happened because they have an unlimited food supply & the committee they formed is to figure out how to get rid of them. Are they not wondering what caused them to even go there in the first place and why they aren't leaving? Something stranger than an 'unlimited food supply' is going on. I mean how often do areas need to form a bird committee due to a mass invasion?
Originally posted by OptimisticPessimist
Originally posted by onthelookout
An incident on RSOE EDIS in Mt Vernon, Indiana USA regarding a "massive bird invasion".
Officials in Mount Vernon are struggling to stay on top of a massive bird invasion. They say there are at least 50,000 birds living in the area. Officials have now set up a bird committee, headed up by water department head Chuck Gray to get rid of the birds by spring. Gray is using chargers that make loud noises, chargers that shoot out sparks to chase the birds, and even a bird cannon. He says the measures are working to clear out the pesky crows, but now blackbirds are a new problem swooping in on the east end of town. Gray says he's not surprised that all kinds of birds keep picking Posey County to land. "They basically have an unlimited food supply, with the trash cans, the 55 pound burn bins we use for trash cans in town, and then we have corn on one side and soybeans on the other side." Resident Edward Lowery says he's glad to hear the city is taking measures to clear the birds out, but he thinks they need to be moving faster. He says in the past three months, blackbird droppings have covered his back patio and the incessant chirping has kept him awake at night. One of his neighbors, Chris Cartwright, agrees. Cartwright says, "It's a health hazard, you know the children they go outside and play, and they get into the bird droppings and everybody knows birds carry diseases." That's why she says she's happy to hear the bird cannon boom, and hopes it will bring some much needed relief, and soon. City officials say it's not really feasible to kill the birds because they would need to be shot down in mass and then cleaned up, making it both messier and more expensive.
It's being suggested that this happened because they have an unlimited food supply & the committee they formed is to figure out how to get rid of them. Are they not wondering what caused them to even go there in the first place and why they aren't leaving? Something stranger than an 'unlimited food supply' is going on. I mean how often do areas need to form a bird committee due to a mass invasion?
Just a FYI. Their latitude/longtitude co-ordinates are a little out.
37° 55.936 87° 53.702 leads to NW Chinaedit on 16-2-2011 by OptimisticPessimist because: (no reason given)edit on 16-2-2011 by OptimisticPessimist because: Blinking html