Archive for the 'Science' Category

Jul 14 2008

Interest in Astronomy

Published by Jayvee under Science

Isn’t it surprising that I have an interest in Astronomy? I haven’t done this before. Though everybody is willing to learn from Astronomy but not all don’t care about it. This interest me very much because of a particular topic. There has been a sighting of “Planet X” and there are a lot of Youtube videos that discloses this particular planet. Though these are videos, I really wanted to formulate or research it on my own way. This would take me a very long time and I have set a deadline for this research paper for 1year. I need to know the basics of Astronomy, the planets, the stars, the measurements and etc.

Good luck to me for this research or mine. I need to read books and more books.

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Mar 06 2008

Fun Fact: Why do roosters crow in the morning

Published by Jayvee under Science

Boy, where did I get this idea. Anyway, it was back when me and my cousin slept together in 1 bedroom. And note, we are both guys. Anyway, whenever I sleep, I always observe that our neighbor’s roosters crow in the morning. I asked my cousin about that fact. He told me, they are just feeling cold or something like that. So I just accepted that fact.

One day, I was in doubt that it’s not right that roosters crow because they feel cold. So, I planned to do some research. I turned to Ask.com for some answers. I stumbled upon a guy named Twig Walkingstick. According to him,

Roosters don’t crow at dawn to be noisy or annoying. They’re protecting their turf!

Before chickens were domesticated, a rooster — that’s a male chicken — used to travel with a group of female chickens. The group claimed a particular area as theirs; they raised their families and hunted for food in this territory. The rooster took it upon himself to crow out to any passing birds that this is their spot.

Song birds do the same thing. It’s still pretty dim and cold at dawn, even though the sun is rising. Dim light means birds can’t find food very well. On top of that, insects — the preferred food of many birds — don’t come out in cold temperatures.

Birds don’t have much to do until the insects come out, so birds that wander use the time to find a spot for the day.

That’s where the singing comes in. Birds that already have a territory — including chickens — sing to send a message to both neighboring birds and passers-by that this is their territory.

So, the next time you hear a rooster crow or a song bird happily chirping in the early morning, you’ll know what they are really saying: Keep out!

That practically answered my question. My cousin’s opinion is busted and thanks to Twig, I’ve found daylight.

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