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3,998 Views • May 21, 2023 • Click to toggle off description
Dutch Navel Pigeon Experiment
HNLMS Tydeman
June, 1995
Filmed by: Louis van Gasteren, Gregor Meerman and Jacqueline van Vugt

Despite decades of research, no one knows how birds navigate to destinations hundreds of miles away. This homing ability is particularly difficult to explain when their home is on the move, as shown here. This excerpt from a longer talk is part of an online course on potential breakthroughs in the sciences. Course materials include scientific papers and relevant chapters from Rupert’s books.
www.sheldrake.org/online-courses

About
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Dr Rupert Sheldrake, PhD, is a biologist and author best known for his hypothesis of morphic resonance. At Cambridge University he worked in developmental biology as a Fellow of Clare College. He was Principal Plant Physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics and From 2005 to 2010 was Director of the Perrott-Warrick project, Cambridge.
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Views : 3,998
Genre: Education
Date of upload: May 21, 2023 ^^


Rating : 4.978 (2/356 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2023-12-13T10:58:45.767968Z
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YouTube Comments - 56 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@t.a.p.4582

11 months ago

Pigeons evolutionary strategy revolves around their soothing cooing sounds and being transient friends to the lonely.

19 |

@ar-visions

11 months ago

This man deserves a Nobel from his theories on morphogenesis. I have been inspired to design and create from his great works and from those of Terence McKenna. These iconic men push the fields of their focus, and we feel it in our own lives as we create. From their dedication we are collectively enabled to push even further, together. Through the theories of Dr Sheldrake we begin to understand the means in which we are enabled to rise. ‘The future is open’.. these are words I live by.. pushing for open data, public works from our amazing collective consciousness.

23 |

@Shadobanned4life

7 months ago

Thank You Dr Sheldrake for having the courage to share your amazing ideas. 🌞

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@devonseamoor

11 months ago

Thank you, Rupert, for your dedication, and oh so typical British style of speaking and tenacity in between spells of politeness 😊 I'm happily surprised (I'm Dutch) to hear of this pigeon- experiment with Dutch pigeons. It's great humour to know of a formal Navy ship and crew, welcoming such an experiment. I'm a longtime follower of your work, living at an older age, observing the gap growing smaller, between the intellect of science and the intelligence of the heart, the world of spirit that begins to bleed through the icicles of logic. Your brave steps to throw stones in the pond of logic are much appreciated. It's truly groundbreaking, only not for eyes that are wide shut. Thank you so much!

18 |

@M.C.Blackwell

10 months ago

How lucky for me that i found this wonderful channel!

4 |

@treygreen6983

11 months ago

Rupert rocks! Sheldrake represents true scientific advancement!

1 |

@JoshPhoenix11

11 months ago

You can judge, and know all you need to know about a person, by how they feel about Pigeons.

17 |

@patriciachadwick5658

11 months ago

My family lived on the outskirts of a mining village, most had pigeons. Their ability to find their own pigeon loft fascinated me as a child...I spent hours, and hours waiting for them to return.

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@LilA-zl6tf

11 months ago

I have for a long time held a notion, that many migrating birds somehow know the regular shipping routes, and use them for their own benefit. At least here in the Baltic it has been quite obvious. Unfortunately, the number of birds has been dropping seriously and year by year. - Once there was a pigeon that came aboard at Brunsbüttel locks (Germany). I immediately got the impression, that it was going to Turku (Finland). And onboard this bird stayed. All through the Kiel Kanal, all across the Baltic Sea, all across the Sea of Archipelago and its islands.... We came to Turku late in the evening. Obviously it was too late to go visit his relatives, or whoever he was going to meet. So, he stayed aboard one more night. And with the first light, he headed towards the city center and the marketplace - where there are many of his kind. 🙂 During the voyage my mates aboard tried to chase this bird away on several occasions, and I kept telling them, that it is not going anywhere yet, because it is travelling to Turku. - And so it went. 😉 Last time at work I also got a pigeon to my bridge to act as a lookout, (yet he was a bit tired lookout, must admit), but this was just a visitor, not a passenger. When my watch ended he found his way out and left the ship. Unlike most pigeons I have seen at sea, this last one did not have any rings in his feet. Yet he was very friendly.

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@not2tees

11 months ago

This huge open question that could be answered to an unknown but considerable degree is very exciting, and I hope that Rupert's proposal chimes with a certain super-yacht owner and real science gets its noble opportunity very soon.

7 |

@medicalmisinformation

11 months ago

Absolutely fascinating.

10 |

@lefroy1

7 months ago

This poses all manner of questions pertaining to the pigeon's sensory and homing abilities. Even paranormal explanations cannot be disregarded.

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@spence2126

11 months ago

I believe your work will reveal important answers to some of lifes mysteries one day. Rupert Sheldrake will be spoken of as a great pioneer many moons from now ✊

2 |

@quantum_tarot

11 months ago

I would love to see this experiment! 🇳🇱 Dutch birds in action , thank u for sharing this !!!💫

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@corkygoss7403

11 months ago

The closing inspires me to comment. There is a certain genius when making inquiry, and enquiry in science, art, and ethics, as "migration" does so subtly here, from RS. Brilliant as always. I am reminded vividly of mitigating a serious pigeon flock on my own property roof that had been there for 4-5 decades before I acquired the house. My efforts took years as they always returned. Even though living with a flock of 40-50 pigeons on the property had to stop, I was able to determine, as an art professor, that they remain among the most beautiful birds on the planet. Cheers, Peace, Onward.

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@greenstair

11 months ago

Brilliant. It is so refreshing and reassuring to hear and see true open-minded interest and questioning. "Real" science, not prejudging and "finding" the most easily monetised or funded answers, but asking the question in hope of finding an real answer - if we can.

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@birgik

11 months ago

Pigeons are amazing

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@cornkobmansanto17

7 months ago

Have you looked into the somewhat regular occurrence of flamingos mistakenly migrating to Siberia?

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@lizw5528

11 months ago

What happened to the pigeons afterwards?

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@Lukas-cm2b

9 months ago

i heard you speak about pigeons in the dutch VPRO documentary 30 years ago so i was just thinking what is new in the pigeon stuff now :D

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