Friday, March 26, 2021

Jewel # 440 (March 22, 2021)

 Ruby-throated Hummingbird | BirdNote

Ruby Throated Hummingbird

Arctic Tern Identification, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Arctic Tern

And they shall be Mine, saith the Lord of hosts, in that day when I 
make up MY JEWELS.
Malachi 3:17

To my dear grandchildren

Birds on the Move (Part 2)

“Yea, the stork in the heaven knows her appointed times; 
and the turtledoves and the crane and the swallow observe the time of their coming.”  Jeremiah 8:7

This Bible verse tells us very plainly of God’s care over the birds and his appointment of the time of their migrations.  Previously  (Part 1) we mentioned that much research had been done by ornithologists, investigating the migrations of birds throughout the world.

The greatest bird traveler of all is the Arctic tern.  This bird flies from the Aleutian Islands to Antarctica every fall and returns again in the spring—some 12,000 miles each way!  A shorter journey is the 25—hour 500 mile, nonstop flight of the ruby throated hummingbird.  This 8-ounce wonder flies from the United States over the Gulf of Mexico to Central America.  How can this tiny bird do this?

From various parts of Europe, storks make round-trip flights of 14,000 miles to Israel, the Nile River and South Africa.  The young storks fly a week or two ahead of the parents, although they have never migrated before.  How do they know where to go?

Swallows arrive in Southern California every March after a 6,000-mile flight from Argentina, going to the same nest previously used.  Oriels wintering in South America return in May to their summer homes in the eastern United States after a 2,000-mile flight.

The Tennessee warbler, weighing, about as much as two quarters, flies 3,000 miles each fall from Canada and the northern United States to Central and South America.  Some fly nonstop.  Others take short rests enroute.  Their close relatives, blackpoll warblers, raise their families in Northern Canada and Alaska.  In September, they meet other blackpoll warblers in New England, and then the whole group continues another 2,100 miles on a 100 hour nonstop ocean flight to South America.  By contrast bobolinks in the fall fly almost entirely overland from Canadian prairies to the pampas of Argentina—a 6,000 mile trip.

Golden provers from Alaska fly over the Pacific to Hawaii—a 2,000 mile trip—and, after resting, fly another 2,000 miles south.  Parent birds leave first, leaving the young ones to follow later.  Never having done this before, can anyone explain how the young ones know the way to the Hawaiian Islands?  One thing we do know is that all of these migrations show us the Creator’s care over all His creation, from the smallest part to the greatest.  “Known unto God are all His works from the beginning of the world” (Acts 15:18).

Many library books will give you much more data than we have space for, but another time we will consider some of the questions we 
asked here. 
(To be continued in Part 3)

Love you all - grandpa

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Jewel # 458 (Oct. 11, 2021)

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