Geese Fly High: Part 3

 •  3 min. read  •  grade level: 10
Listen from:
“Remember His marvelous works that He hath done, His wonders, and the judgments of His mouth.”
1 Chronicles 16:1212Remember his marvellous works that he hath done, his wonders, and the judgments of his mouth; (1 Chronicles 16:12)
What a wonderful experience it is to see and hear a large flock of geese flying overhead. The honking noise of a flock, whether in flight, making a landing, or on the surface of a pond or lakeshore, is often so great that people nearby have to shout to be able to hear one another.
Throughout most of Canada and the United States, millions of geese - in many varieties - migrate south from the soon-coming, cold winter of Arctic lands, Alaska, Canada and the northern United States. Their destinations are the southern parts of the United States, Mexico, some Atlantic islands and even far-away Europe. While in the North, they enjoyed abundant food and raised their young through the spring and summer, but now it is time for warmer, southern spots.
In these southbound flights, it is estimated that more than three million Canada geese follow the long-used four “flyways” stretching across Canada and the United States. In addition, there are thousands of geese of other species taking shorter trips to southern Oregon and California. Some also go to wintering places in New Mexico where the Rio Grande River Refuge awaits them.
In late summer, similar flocks head for reserves in the southern and eastern United States. Many of these flocks gather in huge groups in the Hudson Bay area of Canada before starting the long journey south. At some mysterious signal, leaders take off and others follow in Vshaped formation. They travel about thirty miles per hour, usually around seven thousand feet above ground, but some fly as low as three thousand feet. Some have been spotted by airplane pilots as high as 29,000 feet (more than five miles high)! How high they fly seems to depend on how long the flight will be, as well as how high the mountains are over which they will fly.
We might ask, “How do they know these things in advance?” Again the answer is that this knowledge is really part of the instincts given them by the Creator. In their long flights, which may take two weeks or more, stops are made along the way for resting and feeding.
How do these amazing birds know where to go when seasons change, and how do they know after a few months to return to the exact same nesting spots? Many experiments have been made to explain this, but the real answer is that the Creator gave the first pair these amazing instincts which have been passed on from one generation to the next.
The person who wrote our opening Bible verse possibly didn’t know about geese, but he called on his people to remember all God’s wonderful works that they were familiar with, as well as remembering what God had told them. We have the advantage of God’s written words in the Bible. Do you read it and remember it?
(to be continued)
ML-10/16/2005