Because if they flew over the bay they would be called bagels!
Betty
He was following a cow who had just jumped over it. (Cat and the Fiddle)
This phrase forms a part of a long and somewhat tedious speech by Prospero in Act V Scene one of The Tempest, by Shakespeare. He starts out by addressing various groups of fairies, and one group is addressed as follows: "ye that on the sands with printless foot do chase the ebbing Neptune and do fly him when he comes back". Neptune is the Roman God of the sea; the sea ebbs and comes back twice every day. These are called the tides. These fairies, who are so light their feet don't make footprints, run around "on the sands" of the ocean, chasing the sea when the tide is out (ebbing Neptune) and running from it ("fly" means to run away) when it comes back.
A horse fly
The theater manager would fly a flag over its roof the day of a performance.
Usually seagulls fly in land when the weather is stormy out at sea.
Cause if they flew over the bay they'd be called BAYGULLS (bagels)
Seagulls are birds, not sea animals even though they use the sea for food.
no
It's a seagull, cause there are loads of seagulls that fly over laguna beach in California.
about 200ft
Tyrennian Sea - that's if you're going to Palermo; if you are headed to Catania, you'd fly over the Ionian Sea
Gulls are scavengers, and will eat anything. They are looking for handouts.
You would fly over the Irish Sea and the North Sea.
Seagulls seem to fly a lot of poop.
seagulls
Tasman sea