Murmuration

Have you heard of this?  

It's an incredible sight.  Starlings utilize murmuration in defense against predators, such as hawks or falcons.  A starling murmuration is especially fluid in motion and can occur in grand scale. 

I bumped into this video and just had to find out what this was all about.

The starlings ability to do this in such large proportions has to do with their effective perspective range.  Essentially, the ability of one starling to predict and read the behavior of another on the opposite end of the flock.  

This article explains it well:

Imagine a game of telephone: one person passes a message along to the next person, who repeats it to another, and so on. For humans, the telephone message loses information very quickly—that’s what makes the game fun. The first finding, by Cavagna’s team, suggests that very little information is lost in a starling flock. The second finding, by Young’s team, suggests that starlings “play telephone” with their seven nearest neighbors. Somehow they are able to process messages from those seven neighbors all at once, and this is a part of their method for achieving scale-free correlation.
— http://blog.allaboutbirds.org/2013/02/21/how-do-starling-flocks-create-those-mesmerizing-murmurations/

photos courtesy of design boom.com

Absolutely beautiful, right?  Inspiring.  I wonder if humans could communicate like this - would our world be more peaceful? More capable of empathy and interdependence?  What do you think?

Nature is stunning.  Darwin would sigh at their ingenuity, survival of the fittest.

Grandpa & the CMC

A couple weeks ago - I received a concise, unexpected text - 'Chels, I want to come into town this weekend - would that be alright?' - it was my Dad!  Now I work a lot, but my Dad - well, works A LOT.  He is incredibly driven and loves what he does.  It's inspiring.  But it does mean that our paths don't cross often.  

I was so psyched and we had an awesome time!  It was a short, sweet visit.  We made sure to take him to Eli's for a BBQ lunch, snagged a Green Dog Cafe breakfast, welcomed him with a fantastic Paleo Polish Soup and of course, visited the Cincinnati Museum Center.

One of our X-mas gifts from Grandpa and Mimi this year were our passes to the Museum Center, quite possibly one of the best places to take kiddos in Cincinnati (next to the Zoo, the CAC and well - ok...there are a lot of great places).  Especially on cold days.

Watching Soren with my Dad, is - incredible.  It's a blast seeing him lead, explain and play - just like he did with us when we were kids.  I know my Dad always enjoyed having kids, but it's so much more obvious how much he loves and cherishes his time with Soren and how much he must have when we were children.  

So many grandparents tell me how incredible it is having grandchildren, but after watching my Dad - I realize just how lucky my brother and I are to have parents that embrace their role and cherish the challenges and joys of parenthood.

03/52

'A portrait a week of my children, once a week, every week, in 2014'   

Soren with his drill set adorning both a safety vest and citrus juice mustache.  He's become quite the chatter box these days and it's hard to snap a shot without his mouth in motion *wink.  Love it!  

Here is another just for fun.  Pappa bought Soren his first RC car.  It took a little practice to get the hang of the steering - but he did!  He's instructing me on how it works in this photo.