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Mooney 2; Birds 0


exM20K

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You should report the bird strike to the FAA.  Here is a link https://wildlife.faa.gov/strikenew.aspx.  You can also send in some of the snarge and have it identified to help identify what type of birds are being hit.  Here is a link to the details for submitting the snarge for identification. https://wildlife.faa.gov/birdremains.aspx

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1 minute ago, skydvrboy said:

You should report the bird strike to the FAA.  Here is a link https://wildlife.faa.gov/strikenew.aspx.  You can also send in some of the snarge and have it identified to help identify what type of birds are being hit.  Here is a link to the details for submitting the snarge for identification. https://wildlife.faa.gov/birdremains.aspx

I did tell ATC, but I'd forgotten about that link. thanks. Line service earned a nice tip cleaning it up during my meeting, so no remains to send.  Plus... duck season not open till the 20th... 

-dan

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6 hours ago, steingar said:

Can't believe a bird flying high enough to hit an airplane could eat grass.  Not a lot of energy density.

Back in January I flew past a flock of geese at 8,500'. I was heading west and they were going east, fortunately they were about a mile off my wing. (I'm assuming they were geese, I don't know anything else that flies that high in a "v" formation.)

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1 minute ago, Skates97 said:

Back in January I flew past a flock of geese at 8,500'. I was heading west and they were going east, fortunately they were about a mile off my wing. (I'm assuming they were geese, I don't know anything else that flies that high in a "v" formation.)

I'm sure you've heard, but to anyone reading. Don't fly under flocks of geese. They will dive on you. 

IMG00300.JPG

http://hangarspinning.blogspot.com/2010/11/whats-that-goose-doing-at-6500-feet.html

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4 minutes ago, Antares said:

I'm sure you've heard, but to anyone reading. Don't fly under flocks of geese. They will dive on you. 

IMG00300.JPG

http://hangarspinning.blogspot.com/2010/11/whats-that-goose-doing-at-6500-feet.html

Yes, I was taught most birds will drop a wing and head down. There are a lot of birds around some of the airports here and while I haven't been too close to any I have observed that behavior numerous times.

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14 hours ago, exM20K said:

I did tell ATC, but I'd forgotten about that link. thanks. Line service earned a nice tip cleaning it up during my meeting, so no remains to send.  Plus... duck season not open till the 20th... 

-dan

Yeah.  Aviation is expensive enough without paying out of season hunting fines.

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2 hours ago, MBDiagMan said:

Yeah.  Aviation is expensive enough without paying out of season hunting fines.

A local meat processor has a sign out front:

We process deer during all three hunting seasons--bow, gun and car.

I'm sure similar things could happen with planes and birds if it wasn't so hard collecting the carcasses afterwards . . . . .

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On tuesday, We missed a bald eagle by 50-100 ft while descending through 4000 at 170kts.  I was busy looking for two other planes nearby that were on my screen.  By the time I saw it, there was no time to maneuver.  It tipped its wings and dove.  It was slightly below and to the right.  Be careful out there!

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How high do geese fly?

Canada geese fly in a distinctive V-shaped flight formation, with an altitude of 1 km (3,000 feet) for migration flight. The maximum flight ceiling of Canada geese is unknown, but they have been reported at 9 km (29,000 feet).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesser_Canada_Goose
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32 minutes ago, Pritch said:

How high do geese fly?

Canada geese fly in a distinctive V-shaped flight formation, with an altitude of 1 km (3,000 feet) for migration flight. The maximum flight ceiling of Canada geese is unknown, but they have been reported at 9 km (29,000 feet).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesser_Canada_Goose

Holy hell! FL290!?! Don’t they need oxygen too for such a cross country journey? This may suggest birds are of the devil...and as such, we pilots are justified in being a little devilish ourselves....

Edited by One Whiskey Hotel
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On 10/4/2018 at 7:35 PM, Skates97 said:

Back in January I flew past a flock of geese at 8,500'. I was heading west and they were going east, fortunately they were about a mile off my wing. (I'm assuming they were geese, I don't know anything else that flies that high in a "v" formation.)

A B2

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On ‎10‎/‎4‎/‎2018 at 3:30 PM, steingar said:

Can't believe a bird flying high enough to hit an airplane could eat grass.  Not a lot of energy density.

While that may be a grass stain, it is more likely that it is from the grass eating bugs that the bird had eaten. 

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7 hours ago, One Whiskey Hotel said:

Holy hell! FL290!?! Don’t they need oxygen too for such a cross country journey? This may suggest birds are of the devil...and as such, we pilots are justified in being a little devilish ourselves....

They are canadian geese.  Maybe the canadian version of the FAA doesn't have the same oxygen rules? :) 

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