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Sdiver
07-05-2013, 14:36
One would think this is a sketch from the file of Monty Python. :eek:

:munchin

Birdwatchers flock to see rare bird, then watch it killed by wind turbine

There hasn’t been a sighting of a White-throated Needletail in the United Kingdom for 22 years, so nearly 80 birdwatchers flocked to Scotland this week to get a look, the Telegraph reported. But instead of enjoying the world’s fastest flying bird soaring, they watched it fly into the small blade of a wind turbine and die.

"It was seen by birders fly straight into the turbine. It is ironic that after waiting so long for this bird to turn up in the UK, it was killed by a wind turbine and not a natural predator, “ Josh Jones of Bird Guides said.

The Needletail was apparently thousands of miles off course when two bird spotters identified it on the isle of Harris Monday. By Wednesday, scores of watchers had gathered in the Tarbet area of Harris, Outer Hebrides, Scotland to catch a glimpse of the rare bird.

“It’s tragic. More than 80 people had already arrived on the island and others were coming from all over the country. But it just flew into the turbine. It was killed instantly," Jones told the Telegraph.

Avid bird watcher David Campbell witnessed the accident Wednesday. "We all ran over there and were heartbroken to find the poor bird lying beneath the machine, in perfect condition apart from blood and slight trauma on the head - but it was stone dead. Cries of sorrow and anger from the assembled birders began to turn into discussion as to what would happen to the bird's corpse, as we took pictures of it lying there. Seeing it up close, as much as I'd rather it were still alive, was, if nothing else, a rare opportunity to examine the utterly amazing plumage and structure of the Needletail," Campbell wrote in his blog, Devil Birder.

Experts believed the bird had likely come from Siberia, Australia, or Japan. It may have gotten lost and affected by the weather. A spokesman for Bird Guides said it was only the ninth time it was spotted in the UK since 1846.

"A very sad end to a delightful bird that may well have attracted many more birders to Harris over the following days had it not met it's untimely demise, "said Western Isles wildlife expert Steve Duffield.

The bird’s body will be sent to a museum.

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/06/28/birdwatchers-flock-to-see-rare-bird-then-watch-it-killed-by-wind-turbine/?intcmp=obnetwork

PSM
07-05-2013, 14:47
'E's passed on! This White-throated Needletail is no more! He has ceased to be! 'E's expired and gone to meet 'is maker!

'E's a stiff! Bereft of life, 'e rests in peace! If you hadn't nailed 'im to the perch 'e'd be pushing up the daisies!

'Is metabolic processes are now 'istory! 'E's off the twig!

'E's kicked the bucket, 'e's shuffled off 'is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisibile!!

THIS IS AN EX-White-throated Needletail!!

Pat

The Reaper
07-05-2013, 15:17
Sounds more like the Norwegian Blue Needletail.

TR

Dusty
07-05-2013, 16:36
Maybe this tragedy will be enough to move the liberaces to blow off their imbecilic wind energy idea.

MR2
07-05-2013, 17:25
It will be rationalized to be ok since it was not a Arab Needlenose.

Sdiver
07-05-2013, 17:29
Sounds more like the Norwegian Blue Needletail.

TR

Hummmmmm .... maybe he's NOT dead. Maybe he's just pining for the fjords.

Blues are noted for doing that, from time to time.

:munchin:

twistedsquid
07-05-2013, 18:59
I debated the incidents of bird kills and wind farms with a bud a year ago. His response? Only the dumb birds die. Darwinism.

ddoering
07-05-2013, 19:02
The irony of this incident, green power killing an endangered animal would make a good MAD cartoon.

twistedsquid
07-05-2013, 19:06
The irony of this incident, green power killing an endangered animal would make a good MAD cartoon.

The endangered animal was retarded and 2000 miles off course.

orion5
07-05-2013, 19:24
Sounds more like the Norwegian Blue Needletail.

TR

Or possibly the Icelandic Needledick Snowdentail.

MR2
07-05-2013, 20:16
I debated the incidents of bird kills and wind farms with a bud a year ago. His response? Only the dumb birds die. Darwinism.

Does that explain how he voted in 2012?

alelks
07-05-2013, 21:18
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x11g6k2_rare-bird-killed-by-wind-turbine-in-front-of-horrified-spectators_travel#.UdeLd22fXqM

PSM
07-05-2013, 21:38
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x11g6k2_rare-bird-killed-by-wind-turbine-in-front-of-horrified-spectators_travel#.UdeLd22fXqM

I thought the Peregrino...er, uh,... Peregrine Falcon was the world's fastest bird. :confused:

Pat

Paragrouper
07-05-2013, 21:39
Poor birdie, he really hit the fan.

I hope the watchers had time to determine how the unladen airspeed velocity of the White-throated needletail compared to that of a swallow.

alelks
07-05-2013, 21:42
Me too but I guess that's only in a dive.

http://earthsky.org/earth/fastest-bird

The peregrine falcon’s diving speed is amazing. But this bird doesn’t make the top 10 when traveling in level flight. Studies have clocked an Indian bird, the spine-tailed swift, at over 160 kilometers (100 miles) per hour. To see more of the world’s fastest birds while traveling at level flight, see this link.

In 2011, scientists discovered the fastest migratory known so far: the great snipe. After following the birds’ migration south from Sweden to central Africa using tiny tracking devices, Swedish scientists found that the birds fly non-stop over a distance of around 6,760 kilometeres (4,200 miles) at a phenomenal 97 kilometers (60 miles) per hour.

PSM
07-05-2013, 21:53
In 2011, scientists discovered the fastest migratory known so far: the great snipe.

Damn! I had several girlfriends take me snipe hunting in high school. No wonder we never saw any. :(

Pat

Sdiver
07-05-2013, 22:36
Poor birdie, he really hit the fan.

I hope the watchers had time to determine how the unladen airspeed velocity of the White-throated needletail compared to that of a swallow.

African or European ???

:munchin

The_Mentalist
07-05-2013, 23:02
I couldn't tell you how many birds have committed suicide on my windshield. Most notable were a barn owl in the Salinas valley that was so obsessed with the field mouse he just caught to pay attention and banked right into my windshield when he was already most of the way across the roadway. He left a big owl shaped dirty spot (wings outspread) on my windshield. Then I had a flock of starlings in Atlanta. That was a mess. I pulled 4 birds out of the load coils on my CB antennas and had several stuck under the windshield visor. That isn't even counting the ones that bounced off the front and top of the truck. All sorts of critters suicide on our trucks. 3 weeks ago it was a big buck that left a dent and all sorts of body parts along the side of my truck. For a bird to fly into a turbine is not that rare. Remember, there is a term "bird brain" for a reason.

Paragrouper
07-06-2013, 16:19
African or European ???

:munchin

He's good