It's a good story, but I don't find anything at snopes or
straightdope.com. Some Googling for
airport music "repel birds"
doesn't seem to find anything more than a much-copied article saying
that "airport officials have tried everything from loud music and
propane cannons to paintball guns and spraying Kool-Aid to repel
birds."
--
Tim McDaniel, tm...@panix.com
I'm visiting from rasfw. What do we do now?
This is to keep birds away from airport runway and flight path? I
don't know if a well trained bird of prey or two will do the trick -
you know, like royalty in the old days would have such an animal for
hunting. Sounds as dull as golf to me really, and for a similar
reason, you sling the thing up in the sky and then watch what happens
a long way away - only golf balls don't come back to you unless it's
going /very/ badly. And, yeah, you have one special glove, and a
little cover to go over the head when the game is over... Anyway,
famously or apocryphally, Queen Victoria asked the Duke of Wellington
how to deal with small birds that got into the "Crystal Palace" all-
glass exhibition hall, and he said, "Sparrowhawks, ma'am."
As for sound, if aeroplanes don't scare them away then bird alarm
calls ought to have the effect. So what current music sounds most
like a flock of seagulls in distress? For that matter, are we talking
about Britney Spears singing, or dancing as well, in the video? She
does a lot of leaping around, and jumping out of high windows
sometimes which birds probably consider as cheating. I think in "Oops
I Just Hit a Wren" she's flying around on a cable.
But before that I'd try a South American lass named Shaky Ra. Some of
her moves must scare off more than birds.
We optionally discuss it; try to find cites (or anti-cites); apply logic to
it and see if it curls up shrieking; and in general do Skeptical Science to
it. And/or maek joek, or divert into another thread unexpectedly, such as
highway numbering via airport-runway numbering.
Dave "or sometimes it just gets no followups and vanishes; this is the most
active AFU has been in quite some time" DeLaney
--
\/David DeLaney posting from d...@vic.com "It's not the pot that grows the flower
It's not the clock that slows the hour The definition's plain for anyone to see
Love is all it takes to make a family" - R&P. VISUALIZE HAPPYNET VRbeable<BLINK>
http://www.vic.com/~dbd/ - net.legends FAQ & Magic / I WUV you in all CAPS! --K.
> Robert Carnegie: <rja.ca...@excite.com> wrote:
> >On Nov 18, 7:55�pm, t...@panix.com (Tim McDaniel) wrote:
> >> Heard one from a cow-orker today. �An airport tested a variety of
> >> music to repel birds -- the most effective repellant was Britney
> >> Spears.
> >>
> >> It's a good story, but I don't find anything at snopes or
> >> straightdope.com. �Some Googling for
> >> � � airport music "repel birds"
> >> doesn't seem to find anything more than a much-copied article saying
> >> that "airport officials have tried everything from loud music and
> >> propane cannons to paintball guns and spraying Kool-Aid to repel
> >> birds."
> >
> >I'm visiting from rasfw. What do we do now?
>
> We optionally discuss it; try to find cites (or anti-cites); apply logic to
> it and see if it curls up shrieking; and in general do Skeptical Science to
> it. And/or maek joek, or divert into another thread unexpectedly, such as
> highway numbering via airport-runway numbering.
>
> Dave "or sometimes it just gets no followups and vanishes; this is the most
> active AFU has been in quite some time" DeLaney
And we can always fall back on Zip code numbering or Area Code
numbering.
--
Nick Spalding
- oh, and the feathers are on the /inside/.
(If you're using that kind, that is.)
NOTE: Posting from groups.google.com (or some web-forums) dramatically
reduces the chance of your post being seen. Find a real news server.
>Tim McDaniel, tm...@panix.com wrote:
>> a much-copied article saying that "airport officials have tried
>> everything from loud music and propane cannons to paintball guns
>> and spraying Kool-Aid to repel birds."
>This is to keep birds away from airport runway and flight path? I
>don't know if a well trained bird of prey or two will do the trick -
>you know, like royalty in the old days would have such an animal for
>hunting.
It's been tried - mixed results. The birds and handlers are
relatively expensive. Also tried is opening the airport/airfield
to hunters to thin the bird population (animal rights groups
objected, and the aircraft operators were afraid the hunters might
mistake aircraft for birds and shoot at them).
>As for sound, if aeroplanes don't scare them away then bird alarm
>calls ought to have the effect.
Also tried - mixed results. The birds tend to get conditioned to the
sounds and ignore them, just as they ignore propane cannon and other
noise makers..
One technique that produced significant reductions in bird strikes
was to stop renting out the land on the airport/airfield to farmers
who are using it to grow various crops - that attract vermin - that
attracts avian predators. The airport authority looses the income from
the crops, but the aircraft operators don't have to spend as much in
repairs. Similar results were observed as a result of closing refuse
disposal sites in the immediate vicinity of the airport. Another
technique (first used at Ascension Island during WW2) was to install
netting a short distance (0.3 meters/1 foot) above the the ground so
as to prevent the birds from nesting on the airfield. Obviously the
best technique at one facility may be useless at another.
Old guy
> One technique that produced significant reductions in bird strikes
> was to stop renting out the land on the airport/airfield to farmers
> who are using it to grow various crops - that attract vermin - that
> attracts avian predators.
I've read about some airports where they've changed the plants that
grow around the airport to species less attractive to birds.
Presumably that means avoiding grasses that make edible seeds and trees
that make edible fruits, but I don't remember the details.
--
Ray
(remove the Xs to reply)
And/or bird numbering: how many fewer birds _are_ there using Brittany
Spears music, compared, say, to Johnny Cash.
charles
And presto: a circular word-runway! (Or 'ring of fire'.)
Dave
Of course then you have to remember how to spell "Presbyterians".
It's also an anagram for:
Spin betrayers
Banister's prey
Stripes nearby
Inert passerby
Binary presets
Pry it, bareness
Spry in rebates
Try bean spires
Barren piss yet
Absent prey, sir
Arrest by penis
Yep, insert bras
....r
--
A pessimist sees the glass as half empty.
An optometrist asks whether you see the glass
more full like this?...or like this?
It is a man of poor imagination who can think of only one way to spell a
name.
I wonder what to make of the fact that people find new ways to spell
mine that never crossed my mind. And of course it is or was kind of a
famous (infamous) one.
Isn't that a quote from William Shakspere?
--
************* DAVE HATUNEN (hat...@cox.net) *************
* Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow *
* My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps *
It's a damn poor mind that can think of only one way to spell a word.
~Andrew Jackson
I don't give a damn for a man that can only spell a word one way. ~Mark
Twain
<http://shakespeareauthorship.com/name1.html> is from a site
"Dedicated to the Proposition that Shakespeare Wrote Shakespeare". I
leave it to you to guess the addresses of competing web sites with
alternative ideas (e.g. Queen Elizabeth herself or the Earl of Oxford,
who I suppose is the "Oxfordian" candidate). Anyway, Will seems to
have had about as much trouble with the name as one "Mr. Cartnagie"
has had, except of course that I haven't had a large and estimable
body of work attributed to somebody else after my death. Yet.
Stephen Hawking gets it too, I don't know whether J. K. Rowling does...
Um. Note my spelling of "Shakespeare", who is know to have
spelled his own name in several different ways.
Charles
Curses. Hung by my one petard.
--
************* DAVE HATUNEN (hat...@cox.net) *************
* Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow *
* My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps *
Nah. I'm one of the Dead End kids.
--
************* DAVE HATUNEN (hat...@cox.net) *************
* Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow *
* My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps *