Hi John and Everyone,
That is facinating. I can even picture all that happening.
I even saved it.
Thanks.
Blessings,
Pat Ferguson
At 11:51 AM 4/15/2011, you wrote:
>Here is a snip from one of David Cloud's news letters.
>
>THE AMAZING HUMMINGBIRD (Friday Church News
>Notes, April 15, 2011, www.wayoflife.org
>[log in to unmask], 866-295-4143) - The 300
>species of hummingbirds vary in size from the
>giant hummingbird, with a length of about eight
>inches (20 cm.), to the bee hummingbird, with a
>length of about two inches (5 cm.). The
>hummingbird’s wings beat a figure eight pattern
>which allows it to hover and fly backwards (by
>moving the wings in a circular path over its
>head), sideways, and even upside down. It can
>beat its wings up to 200 cycles per second and
>can reach speeds of 50 miles per hour. The wing
>muscles necessary to drive this flight system
>represent up to 40% of the bird’s total body
>weight. Its long, thin beak is designed to feed
>on the nectar of flowers; its tongue has two
>furrows that it uses to store the nectar. The
>tongue can go in and out at a rate of 13 times
>per second, and is stored by being curled up at
>the back of the bird’s head. Its tongue is also
>fringed so it can sweep insects from inside
>flowers. “It cannot survive on nectar alone, but
>also needs protein from eating insects. Without
>its special tongue it could never catch these”
>(A Closer Look at the Evidence, July 14). One
>type of hummingbird is the fastest diving bird
>on earth. “A peregrine falcon diving toward its
>prey reaches a relative speed of 200
>body-lengths per second. This is close to the
>207 body-lengths that the space shuttle travels
>as it enters our atmosphere. Thus, the peregrine
>falcon was thought to easily be the fastest
>dare-devil bird on Earth. Scientists have now
>discovered that a little pink male hummingbird
>called Anna’s Hummingbird is the real Top Gun
>among the birds. As part of its mating ritual, a
>male hummingbird will try to impress a female
>with his speed and acrobatics. First, the male
>will fly up to about 90 feet above the ground.
>Then, he begins a power dive. As he nears the
>female, he pulls up, ascending again. During
>that near-miss pull-up he experiences more than
>nine times the force of gravity. His relative
>speed during descent is 385 body-lengths per
>second. That’s almost twice the peregrine
>falcon’s relative speed; it’s faster than the
>space shuttle entering the Earth’s atmosphere
>and is more than twice the relative speed of a
>jet fighter running with afterburners”
>(http://www.creationmoments.com/radio/transcript.php?t=2889).
>One type of hummingbird can fly 500 miles nonstop over the Gulf of Mexico.
>
>
>
>John
>Currently in Ocala, Florida Partly Cloudy, 80°F Wind:ESE-110° at 7mph
>e-i-e-i-o: A gross misspelling of the word 'farm'.
>Created by Weather Signature v1.33 • http://www.weathersig.com
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