bunk22
Well-Known Member
...granted, NAS Kingsville has the most reported bird strikes and near misses of any airport in the US. At least that's what we are told as we are in a major bird migratory track. Now, when I say near misses, I'm talking within feet and today, missed by maybe a foot.
I was leading a section (2 plane), 10 miles northwest of the field, 2,500' and 310KIAS. I was in a slight right turn, leveled my wings and looked forward through the HUD and noticed a small black, flat, speck. I thought, what is that speck and I no kidding just squint at it as it gets larger. The hawk or vulture had its wings spread so it was flat but at co-altitude, HUD level. Wish I had a video tape it for later HUD review. When I realize it's a bird, I can't go right as my wing is out there but I do a quick right wing down and back as the bird tucks wings and starts down to his right. Beak to beak with the bird. I had the flight doc in the back seat, just laughing after the fact. He could see its eyes he said, with a chuckle. I wasn't so amused lol Luckily the bird had better SA than me, avoiding a bad situation...into canopy at 300+ knots and also missing my intake.
After the bird passed, I notice at my 2 o'clock, about one thousand feet above, a bird tornado. I've seen them before and this one was no different. The birds I guess catch a thermal and spin around in this big twister. There had to be 100+ birds in this one, probably 500-800' high of large vultures, hawks, or something. I had seen two larger last year, with one having probably 300+ birds with birds spilling out of the edges, just hundreds of large birds in a small area.
Anyway, 4th near bird mid-air in two months, all within 10 feet, this was the closest. Fun times in Kingsville.
I was leading a section (2 plane), 10 miles northwest of the field, 2,500' and 310KIAS. I was in a slight right turn, leveled my wings and looked forward through the HUD and noticed a small black, flat, speck. I thought, what is that speck and I no kidding just squint at it as it gets larger. The hawk or vulture had its wings spread so it was flat but at co-altitude, HUD level. Wish I had a video tape it for later HUD review. When I realize it's a bird, I can't go right as my wing is out there but I do a quick right wing down and back as the bird tucks wings and starts down to his right. Beak to beak with the bird. I had the flight doc in the back seat, just laughing after the fact. He could see its eyes he said, with a chuckle. I wasn't so amused lol Luckily the bird had better SA than me, avoiding a bad situation...into canopy at 300+ knots and also missing my intake.
After the bird passed, I notice at my 2 o'clock, about one thousand feet above, a bird tornado. I've seen them before and this one was no different. The birds I guess catch a thermal and spin around in this big twister. There had to be 100+ birds in this one, probably 500-800' high of large vultures, hawks, or something. I had seen two larger last year, with one having probably 300+ birds with birds spilling out of the edges, just hundreds of large birds in a small area.
Anyway, 4th near bird mid-air in two months, all within 10 feet, this was the closest. Fun times in Kingsville.