Bird Feathers Tweet Like Violin Strings

Everyone wants to understand painting.
Why is there no attempt to understand the song of the birds?
Pablo Picasso

The mystery of nature has and will continue to unfold and surprise mankind everyday. 

A new study from Cornell University confirms that the male club-winged manakins vibrate their wings to create violin-like sounds to impress females.

The manakin vibrates its wings at more than 100 cycles per second, twice the speed of hummingbirds.

Using lasers to monitor feather vibrations, Kimberly Bostwick’s (researcher) team reports in Proceedings of the Royal Society that the manakins club-shaped feathers vibrate at 1500 hertz. This is the same frequency of the sound made by the manakin.  Visit the National Geographic site for this impressive full story. 

Illumination:
If one bird species makes this vibrational violin sound, you would have to THINK that ALL birds have the same vibrational capabilities.  Everything is vibrational energy including humans!

As a “connections company” we analzye a deeper meaning to all media stories, images and words.   This study confirmed the “reason” why so many violin images have been gaining our “attention” in recent months.  heARTificial Intelligence is sending a very subtle message, be joyful and get singing!

Let Go. Simply Trust Life.

We Are Connected & Buzzing

Everything on the planet is connected, the ONENESS factor is beginning to surface more and more. I recently had to call my telephone company Bell Canada to come and fix my telephone service because my DSL Internet connection was performing intermittently.

What I was not expecting was a beehive with frozen bees in my outside phone connection box.  The Bell engineer who was incredibly friendly quipped, “You Have A Buzz on Your Line”!

The deeper meaning of this incident?  heARTificial Intelligence at work.  The bees created their beehive in the telephone box. Food for thought, perhaps they were not able to distinguish the difference between the sound of the technology “humming” sound and their normal abode.

Bees are very intelligent. Scientists have long marveled over the dance of the bee. A little jitterbug seems to reveal to coworkers the location of a distant meal.  Experiments by James Gould suggest that honey bees may have a cognitive map for information they have learned, and utilize it when communicating.

Environmentalists also say the decline in bee populations threatens our ecosystems.

Bee’s Take Resident in Phone Communication Box

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