
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


As it began to hail, Marlon Inniss saw several Canada Geese doing something odd. Rather than trying to shield their heads, the geese pointed their bills skyward, directly into the path of the hail. The geese were pointing the smallest surface area of their sensitive bills, the narrow tip, into the hail — minimizing the impact. Inniss’s video of the behavior helped reaffirm an observation made by naturalist Aldo Leopold one hundred years before of Northern Pintails adopting the same stance. Learn more at BirdNote.org.
By BirdNote4.8
12101,210 ratings
As it began to hail, Marlon Inniss saw several Canada Geese doing something odd. Rather than trying to shield their heads, the geese pointed their bills skyward, directly into the path of the hail. The geese were pointing the smallest surface area of their sensitive bills, the narrow tip, into the hail — minimizing the impact. Inniss’s video of the behavior helped reaffirm an observation made by naturalist Aldo Leopold one hundred years before of Northern Pintails adopting the same stance. Learn more at BirdNote.org.

43,969 Listeners

38,526 Listeners

6,740 Listeners

38,670 Listeners

1,480 Listeners

6,352 Listeners

649 Listeners

1,245 Listeners

24,318 Listeners

416 Listeners

3,367 Listeners

873 Listeners

103 Listeners

1,221 Listeners

1,709 Listeners

171 Listeners

41 Listeners

160 Listeners

14 Listeners