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Whooping cranes behind an airplane

Whooping cranes behind an airplane
December 2015. An organization called "Operation Migration" tried for several years to train endangered whooping cranes to fly behind ultralight aircraft. The plan was to show them the way from their birthplace in Wisconsin to wintering areas in Florida. This photo shows their last, unsuccesful day of flying. The birds refused to fly further south. They were taken in crates to a nearby location in Alabama. Eventually, they met other cranes who knew about appropriate places to spend the winter.
Now, these and a few other whooping cranes, spend the winter in Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge in northern Alabama.

E. Adam G., Fred Fouarge, micritter, Diane Putnam and 8 other people have particularly liked this photo


Latest comments - All (19)
 Ronald Losure
Ronald Losure club has replied
Am Tag dieses Fotos weigerten sie sich, dem Flugzeug zu folgen. Jetzt folgen sie ihrer eigenen Familie.
6 years ago.
 Ronald Losure
Ronald Losure club has replied
I think it is "Fly Away Home." I have heard of it but have never seen it. I saw an earlier movie titled "Come On Goose" that was about trying to teach Canada geese to fly behind an airplane.
6 years ago.
 Diane Putnam
Diane Putnam club
Fascinating! I had no idea that any kind of migrating bird would not know where to go! It seems that the evolution for that talent is not quite complete. A delightful photo, anyway.
6 years ago.
 sunlight
sunlight club has replied
Dann sind sie gut vorbereitet ein selbstständiges Leben zu führen und folgen jetzt
wieder ihren Urinstinkten.
6 years ago.
 Ronald Losure
Ronald Losure club has replied
These birds were raised without their parents in Wisconsin, so the theory was to train them to follow the airplane. That didn't always work. I'm not sure what is being done now.
6 years ago.

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