condor
Birds with longer wingspans do not have to beat their wings as fast. It's the same as the difference between a jet fighter and an unpowered glider aircraft: the jet needs a lot of thrust to allow its smaller wings to produce the same amount of lift, whereas the glider has a large wingspan and flies at slower speeds. As an example, egrets, cranes, swans, and herons all have long wingspans and beat their wings slower than smaller birds. However, birds that soar long distances sometimes can travel for hundreds of miles without flapping their wings. Hawks, vultures, and eagles riding thermals can travel long distances without flapping their wings, and seabirds such as gulls, frigatebirds, and albatross are masters of efficient flight and can travel for very long periods without flapping their wings or landing at all.
An albatross can glide over a thousand miles without flapping its wings.
An eagle can soar without flapping its wings for several hours, depending on factors like wind conditions and thermal currents.
Eagle
it means to fly without flapping wings
20 yards
A hawk can soar upward without flapping its wings by utilizing convection currents, which are upward streams of warm air. As the sun heats the Earth's surface, the warm air rises, creating these currents. By gliding into these rising columns of warm air, the hawk can gain altitude effortlessly, conserving energy while maintaining flight. This technique allows it to travel long distances while searching for prey.
It is flapping wings.
planes! ( if this was a joke question???)
It is flapping wings.
Budgies do not soar. They fly, and to do so, they must flap their wings.
A common Northeast American Bat can jump higher than the average NBA player without flapping it's wings. A common Northeast American Bat can jump higher than the average NBA player without flapping it's wings.