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Goose at FL 360????



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 5th 05, 05:01 AM
A Lieberman
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Default Goose at FL 360????

Is the following for real or is there a typo?

Geese in Class A airspace???

Allen
------------

IDENTIFICATION
Regis#: UPS28 Make/Model: B757 Description: B-757
Date: 11/03/2005 Time: 2325

Event Type: Incident Highest Injury: None Mid Air: N Missing: N
Damage: Unknown

LOCATION
City: COLORADO SPRINGS State: CO Country: US

DESCRIPTION
ACFT, UPS28, A B757, ENROUTE FROM SDF TO MHR, STRUCK A GOOSE AT FL360.
ACFT DESCENDED TO FL280, DUE TO THE WINDSHIELD BEING CRACKED AND
CONTINUED
ON TO DESTINATION. PILOT DID NOT DECLARE AN EMERGENCY. OVER COLORADO
SPRINGS, CO

INJURY DATA Total Fatal: 0
# Crew: 4 Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0
Unk:
# Pass: 0 Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0
Unk:
# Grnd: Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0
Unk:

WEATHER: NOT REPORTED

OTHER DATA
Activity: Business Phase: Cruise Operation: Air Carrier
  #2  
Old November 5th 05, 06:03 AM
BTIZ
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Default Goose at FL 360????

not a typo...

yes... they can get that high..
taking advantage of the jet stream would be my guess

BT

"A Lieberman" wrote in message
.. .
Is the following for real or is there a typo?

Geese in Class A airspace???

Allen
------------

IDENTIFICATION
Regis#: UPS28 Make/Model: B757 Description: B-757
Date: 11/03/2005 Time: 2325

Event Type: Incident Highest Injury: None Mid Air: N Missing: N
Damage: Unknown

LOCATION
City: COLORADO SPRINGS State: CO Country: US

DESCRIPTION
ACFT, UPS28, A B757, ENROUTE FROM SDF TO MHR, STRUCK A GOOSE AT FL360.
ACFT DESCENDED TO FL280, DUE TO THE WINDSHIELD BEING CRACKED AND
CONTINUED
ON TO DESTINATION. PILOT DID NOT DECLARE AN EMERGENCY. OVER COLORADO
SPRINGS, CO

INJURY DATA Total Fatal: 0
# Crew: 4 Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0
Unk:
# Pass: 0 Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0
Unk:
# Grnd: Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0
Unk:

WEATHER: NOT REPORTED

OTHER DATA
Activity: Business Phase: Cruise Operation: Air Carrier



  #3  
Old November 5th 05, 12:09 PM
Peter R.
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Default Goose at FL 360????

BTIZ wrote:

not a typo...

yes... they can get that high..
taking advantage of the jet stream would be my guess


The whole time of useful consciousness apparently is not an issue with a
goose? I wonder what gives a goose's lungs the ability to extract o2 at
that altitude?

--
Peter
























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  #4  
Old November 5th 05, 02:05 PM
A Lieberman
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Default Goose at FL 360????

On Sat, 5 Nov 2005 07:09:56 -0500, Peter R. wrote:

The whole time of useful consciousness apparently is not an issue with a
goose? I wonder what gives a goose's lungs the ability to extract o2 at
that altitude?


In addition to what Peter wrote above, I wonder what gives the goose the
ability to even survive the extreme cold temperatures. O2 was my first
thought and temp came secondary.

Or the ability to maintain lift at that altitude since the air would be
quite thin?

I know goose down clothing are warm, but are Geese that tough?

Allen
  #5  
Old November 5th 05, 02:10 PM
John
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Default Goose at FL 360????

not to mention flying (for birds) is high metabolism work . . .. how
do they make it work that high

  #6  
Old November 5th 05, 05:08 PM
AES
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Posts: n/a
Default Goose at FL 360????

In article .com,
"John" wrote:

not to mention flying (for birds) is high metabolism work . . .. how
do they make it work that high


I believe I read long ago that there are migratory birds of some variety
that make a (nonstop?) migratory flight from the Indian Ocean across the
Himalayas, including flying higher than Everest. Apparently bird
metabolism allows some substantial sustained flight at altitudes above
where humans can even maintain life long term . . .?
  #7  
Old November 5th 05, 03:26 PM
BTIZ
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Default Goose at FL 360????

There was an article in outdoor magazine last summer about how high birds
fly and it mentioned their O2 ability to "recirculation" to get max 02 and
that migrating birds do change altitude based on headwind/tailwind

I once dodged, not that I moved much other than flinching, a soaring raptor
at FL210 in SW Wyoming. I was in a B-52 and the co-pilot and I both saw it.

In response to another posting in "how do they know what it was?", yes, they
do take DNA samples from evidence left behind, along with tell tale feathers
etc. Had to do that one night after missing a snow owl on a ILS approach. He
left a grease trail and some feathers down the side of the B-1.

BT

"A Lieberman" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 5 Nov 2005 07:09:56 -0500, Peter R. wrote:

The whole time of useful consciousness apparently is not an issue with a
goose? I wonder what gives a goose's lungs the ability to extract o2 at
that altitude?


In addition to what Peter wrote above, I wonder what gives the goose the
ability to even survive the extreme cold temperatures. O2 was my first
thought and temp came secondary.

Or the ability to maintain lift at that altitude since the air would be
quite thin?

I know goose down clothing are warm, but are Geese that tough?

Allen



  #8  
Old November 5th 05, 04:21 PM
Paul Tomblin
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Posts: n/a
Default Goose at FL 360????

In a previous article, "BTIZ" said:
etc. Had to do that one night after missing a snow owl on a ILS approach. He
left a grease trail and some feathers down the side of the B-1.


I wouldn't call that "missing", myself.


--
Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/
"SPARC" is "CRAPS" backwards --Rob Pike
  #9  
Old November 5th 05, 05:26 PM
Darkwing
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Posts: n/a
Default Goose at FL 360????


"BTIZ" wrote in message
newsa4bf.2746$zu6.38@fed1read04...
There was an article in outdoor magazine last summer about how high birds
fly and it mentioned their O2 ability to "recirculation" to get max 02 and
that migrating birds do change altitude based on headwind/tailwind

I once dodged, not that I moved much other than flinching, a soaring
raptor at FL210 in SW Wyoming. I was in a B-52 and the co-pilot and I both
saw it.

In response to another posting in "how do they know what it was?", yes,
they do take DNA samples from evidence left behind, along with tell tale
feathers etc. Had to do that one night after missing a snow owl on a ILS
approach. He left a grease trail and some feathers down the side of the
B-1.

BT



They don't actually pay you to fly those incredible planes so they?

-----------------------
DW


  #10  
Old November 6th 05, 10:05 PM
Seth Masia
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Posts: n/a
Default Goose at FL 360????

Wasn't a miss for the owl . . .


"BTIZ" wrote in message
newsa4bf.2746$zu6.38@fed1read04...
There was an article in outdoor magazine last summer about how high birds
fly and it mentioned their O2 ability to "recirculation" to get max 02 and
that migrating birds do change altitude based on headwind/tailwind

I once dodged, not that I moved much other than flinching, a soaring
raptor at FL210 in SW Wyoming. I was in a B-52 and the co-pilot and I both
saw it.

In response to another posting in "how do they know what it was?", yes,
they do take DNA samples from evidence left behind, along with tell tale
feathers etc. Had to do that one night after missing a snow owl on a ILS
approach. He left a grease trail and some feathers down the side of the
B-1.

BT

"A Lieberman" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 5 Nov 2005 07:09:56 -0500, Peter R. wrote:

The whole time of useful consciousness apparently is not an issue with a
goose? I wonder what gives a goose's lungs the ability to extract o2 at
that altitude?


In addition to what Peter wrote above, I wonder what gives the goose the
ability to even survive the extreme cold temperatures. O2 was my first
thought and temp came secondary.

Or the ability to maintain lift at that altitude since the air would be
quite thin?

I know goose down clothing are warm, but are Geese that tough?

Allen





 




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