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Name a small pleasure in life that is free
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Jan 14, 2024 16:04:00   #
wmurnahan Loc: Bloomington IN
 
When I moved to Southern Illinois, the first migration I witnessed left me in awe. One morning I saw a line of geese heading north, I could not see the beginning or the end of the flock. The lakes I drove past had so many geese on them, there was only a small spot of water in the middle that was not solid geese. By the way, great capture of the mass of geese.

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Jan 15, 2024 00:00:20   #
lamiaceae Loc: San Luis Obispo County, CA
 
Bridges wrote:
What inspired me to post this is a small pleasure I have enjoyed for the last thirty-three years since moving to the Lehigh Valley of PA.

We are on the flyway for Snow Geese coming down from Canada. The geese will come down around dawn and fill many acres of the harvested corn fields in the area. They are eating the kernels thrown off as the harvesters load corn into large dump trucks that haul them out of the fields. In addition to kernels being thrown off by the transfer process, additional kernels get jostled out of the trucks.

In the late afternoon, after feeding all day, the geese take to the skies and look for a lake or pond to land in for the night. They form massive V-shaped formations that stretch for miles. Tens of thousands make this transfer from fields to water each day. This goes on for about three weeks until colder weather drives them farther south. Sometimes you can catch these formations set against a great sunset and that is truly awe-inspiring.

I love standing outside and watching as wave after wave of these geese fly over (better they fly over a little off from directly overhead as they can plaster an area with droppings -- my car and driveway have been victim to that on several occasions). You can hear them from a mile away. Sometimes the stream of honkers lasts for ten or fifteen minutes.

Remembering films I've seen of D-day, also makes me think of the waves of bombers the Germans must have seen as the formations flew over in support of the Allied landings at Normandy.
What inspired me to post this is a small pleasure ... (show quote)


It is funny, after reading your post Saturday evening we saw a small flock of possibly geese, herons, or ergret flying in formation over Pismo Beach and US-101. Most likely Canada Goose flying in a changing formation from a V to a W, back to a V. That was cool!

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Jan 15, 2024 00:22:16   #
Bridges Loc: Memphis, Charleston SC, now Nazareth PA
 
wmurnahan wrote:
When I moved to Southern Illinois, the first migration I witnessed left me in awe. One morning I saw a line of geese heading north, I could not see the beginning or the end of the flock. The lakes I drove past had so many geese on them, there was only a small spot of water in the middle that was not solid geese. By the way, great capture of the mass of geese.


Thank you. Each year the photogs in the area try to network and let everyone know which fields the geese are in. From year to year, it shifts and you can never count on seeing them. At times they are in fields three or four miles north or west and we attempt to track them down. We seldom see them overnight on water since there aren't many large ponds or lakes in the Lehigh Valley. There are several quarries and they will use them. The quarries are not accessible, being on land fenced off by the mining companies.

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Jan 15, 2024 08:31:36   #
Archboo3 Loc: Central Florida
 
I was thinking sex.But them I looked around my house and watched my son and daughter and then my 7 grandsons and realized that sex is actuality more expensive than my house. So I got nothing.

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Jan 15, 2024 08:54:41   #
Blaster34 Loc: Florida Treasure Coast
 
Bridges wrote:
What inspired me to post this is a small pleasure I have enjoyed for the last thirty-three years since moving to the Lehigh Valley of PA.

We are on the flyway for Snow Geese coming down from Canada. The geese will come down around dawn and fill many acres of the harvested corn fields in the area. They are eating the kernels thrown off as the harvesters load corn into large dump trucks that haul them out of the fields. In addition to kernels being thrown off by the transfer process, additional kernels get jostled out of the trucks.

In the late afternoon, after feeding all day, the geese take to the skies and look for a lake or pond to land in for the night. They form massive V-shaped formations that stretch for miles. Tens of thousands make this transfer from fields to water each day. This goes on for about three weeks until colder weather drives them farther south. Sometimes you can catch these formations set against a great sunset and that is truly awe-inspiring.

I love standing outside and watching as wave after wave of these geese fly over (better they fly over a little off from directly overhead as they can plaster an area with droppings -- my car and driveway have been victim to that on several occasions). You can hear them from a mile away. Sometimes the stream of honkers lasts for ten or fifteen minutes.

Remembering films I've seen of D-day, also makes me think of the waves of bombers the Germans must have seen as the formations flew over in support of the Allied landings at Normandy.
What inspired me to post this is a small pleasure ... (show quote)



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Jan 15, 2024 09:37:20   #
Ruthlessrider
 
Swimming in lakes Michigan or Superior.

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Jan 15, 2024 10:55:50   #
Bridges Loc: Memphis, Charleston SC, now Nazareth PA
 
Archboo3 wrote:
I was thinking sex.But them I looked around my house and watched my son and daughter and then my 7 grandsons and realized that sex is actuality more expensive than my house. So I got nothing.


Well, now that you've invoked sex into the post, have you heard about this conversation between God and Adam?

God told Adam he believed he needed some human companionship and had created a woman. Adam asked God what was a woman, so God told him.

Then God told him he needed to go to the woman who lived a ways off. He told him he would need to cross a river and Adam asked what a river was. God explained what a river was and continued that he would then walk over a hill. Adam asked what a hill was and God told him what that was. Then he told Adam he would find a cave and Adam wanted to know what a cave was, so God told him. God then told Adam he was to go into the cave where he would find the women and commence to procreate. Adam asked God what that was and it was explained in detail. So Adam swam the river, went over the hill, found the cave, and went in. A few minutes later Adam exited the cave and called out to God. God was getting a little exasperated by this time and asked Adam what he needed now.

Adam then asked God, "What is a headache?"

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Jan 15, 2024 16:17:20   #
Finn Man Loc: wisconsin
 
Beautiful shots...K.A.N.

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Jan 15, 2024 18:22:54   #
wmurnahan Loc: Bloomington IN
 
Archboo3 wrote:
I was thinking sex.But them I looked around my house and watched my son and daughter and then my 7 grandsons and realized that sex is actuality more expensive than my house. So I got nothing.


LOL True, so true. Sex is not free unless it is with yourself.

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Jan 15, 2024 18:28:27   #
wmurnahan Loc: Bloomington IN
 
Bridges wrote:
Thank you. Each year the photogs in the area try to network and let everyone know which fields the geese are in. From year to year, it shifts and you can never count on seeing them. At times they are in fields three or four miles north or west and we attempt to track them down. We seldom see them overnight on water since there aren't many large ponds or lakes in the Lehigh Valley. There are several quarries and they will use them. The quarries are not accessible, being on land fenced off by the mining companies.
Thank you. Each year the photogs in the area try ... (show quote)


I lived in Southern Illinois at that time, right on the Mississippi flyway. I'm from and now live back in Indiana and we are on the flyway but not the big part. About 45 min south, there is Goose Pond, which gets a lot of snow geese and sandhill cranes, but also get the few whooping cranes that are re-establishing their Eastern flyway. But none of that compares to Southern Illinois. It was a sight I will never forget, the ponds so full another goose could hardly find open water to land in.

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Jan 15, 2024 18:31:44   #
DebAnn Loc: Toronto
 
Bridges wrote:
What inspired me to post this is a small pleasure I have enjoyed for the last thirty-three years since moving to the Lehigh Valley of PA.

We are on the flyway for Snow Geese coming down from Canada. The geese will come down around dawn and fill many acres of the harvested corn fields in the area. They are eating the kernels thrown off as the harvesters load corn into large dump trucks that haul them out of the fields. In addition to kernels being thrown off by the transfer process, additional kernels get jostled out of the trucks.

In the late afternoon, after feeding all day, the geese take to the skies and look for a lake or pond to land in for the night. They form massive V-shaped formations that stretch for miles. Tens of thousands make this transfer from fields to water each day. This goes on for about three weeks until colder weather drives them farther south. Sometimes you can catch these formations set against a great sunset and that is truly awe-inspiring.

I love standing outside and watching as wave after wave of these geese fly over (better they fly over a little off from directly overhead as they can plaster an area with droppings -- my car and driveway have been victim to that on several occasions). You can hear them from a mile away. Sometimes the stream of honkers lasts for ten or fifteen minutes.

Remembering films I've seen of D-day, also makes me think of the waves of bombers the Germans must have seen as the formations flew over in support of the Allied landings at Normandy.
What inspired me to post this is a small pleasure ... (show quote)


Great to see - and great to view your photos if you can't watch the birds in person.

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Jan 15, 2024 19:46:57   #
packerman
 
Though it is actually a great pleasure, I thoroughly enjoy watching my grandkids playing soccer and T-ball.

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