Flight of the Bumblebee
By Bee
- 5397 reads
In the seeming improbability of the flight of the bumblebee
one misconception was the belief that it flaps its wings
up and down, when with rare exceptions,
it flaps them back and forth.
The Chinese glued specks of glass to the underneath
of these, then tracked reflected light, which proved
beyond a doubt that they do possess the capability
of flight.
Then scientists used smoke in a wind tunnel
with high-speed cameras to observe the workings of the wings,
and concluded that bumble bee power was inefficient,
and aerodynamically speaking, with regards to being airborne,
a bumble bee wasn't cut out for the job.
Added to a considered imbalance, the left and right wings beat
independently, and the airflow around, being disconnected
in such a separation, sets Bombus Terrestris apart, in that
instead of the finesse of better flying insects, bumblebees
need to use brute force to rise where others glide,
added to which, their cumbrous bodies must be fueled
on considerable quantities of collected nectar
after less than energy efficient exercise.
But it's an odd myth that a bumblebee's wings are too thin
and small to gift it with the needed lift,
for though scientists have made advancement in understanding
how different kinds of airflow could generate the needed waft,
there were always those through history who more than suspected
that bumblebees could fly, because they'd seen it with their eyes,
and thought all this unnecessary research was daft.
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Comments
Love it Bee!
Love it Bee!
Of course dear Bombus has always known the fact, as I have since early childhood, from my fascination of their independance and friendliness. Thanks for sharing this excellent piece
Rob
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'Allo allo. I'd cut 'indeed'
'Allo allo. I'd cut 'indeed' and re-consider 'was totally wrong for the job.' Maybe 'wasn't cut out for the job?' The words stuck out in an otherwise sculpted piece. See what you think. Stick your tongue out if you disagree. Perhaps you could pin this line down even more - clarification wise:
Along with a possible imbalance, the left and right wings beat
independently, and the airflow around,
I recall your earlier one and this is so much tighter. It's a fabulous high-brow piece and a quick-speaking poem with facts that knock me flat.
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Sitting at the top of the
Sitting at the top of the hill today with hubby who is in the process of trying to make a kite (Parkinson's permitting) I was amazed at how many types of bees there were buzzing about in the clover that abounds there. How very much we take them for granted but their numbers are declining rapidly, and it is doesn't take a genius to envisage the demise of our world, as we know it, should they cease to procreate.
A cracking poem, Bee, and just keep buzzing, ad infinitum....please
Tina
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ah this is fantastic! but ah,
ah this is fantastic! but ah, I don't have the necessary diction to describe how it read - think vera says it best with 'high-brow and quick-speaking'! think there was layers within layers here but it's the rattle of diction and interest that first jumps out. something different and marvellously enjoyable - 'The Chinese glued specks of glass to the underneath /of bumblebees'
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Hi Bee
Hi Bee
I enjoyed reading this again, and agree with Vera that this version is better. Well done.
Jean
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Nice one Bee (pun sorry)
I like the idea of putting scientific discussions into a poem. Would have made my school lessons interesting.
If it's true, one of the most sensible things (perhaps the only one) Adolf Hitler is supposed to have said was something like, the reason a Bumble Bee can fly is because it doesn't know it can't.
Edx
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Brilliant. Cuts right through
Brilliant. Cuts right through the you-know-what.
Parson Thru
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