A Mumuration of Starlings

I don’t think I’ve ever witnessed this phenomenon before, but I even knew what it’s called. It took place when I walked my loop Friday, right here in the suburbs.

Starlings were flocking in neighborhood trees earlier this morning, but here was a whole flock of them in an aerial dance right ahead of me, swooping and looping back on themselves, undulating.

This will give you the idea.

I learned about it when I wrote the story of Dale Wilson earning money for his senior year during the Great Depression when there was a bounty on the pests.

Story also in Leora’s Dexter Stories: The Scarcity Years of the Great Depression.

From The Wandering Voice by GardenBird, “The beautiful sight of them flocking and flying in perfect formation is something you don’t forget in a hurry once you’ve seen it, but arguably, the most interesting fact about murmuration is that starlings are the only species of birds who do it.”

27 comments

  1. I have seen a good number of murmurations. They really are not that rare. Eerie, yes, but also scary, at least to predators of starlings. I think that is their goal, much like smaller fish in the sea. Thanks, Joy.

  2. I wonder if the murmuration of starlings gave Alfred Hitchcock the idea for his movie “The Birds.” That is quite the phenomenon. It would be quite scary to be underneath the starling cloud!

    • Hmm, maybe. Here’s what I learned: Some of the “crows” were actually ravens. The gulls were caught in the San Francisco garbage dump and the sparrows were caught by John “Bud” Cardos. However, the captured sparrows had to be used alongside birds from pet shops to achieve full effect in the scene where they invade the house. Wow!

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