The Fantastic Journey of the Golden Plover

One of the migratory birds in the Northern Hemisphere is the golden plover. Mayhaps they dislike the cold because they migrate to areas that are much warmer. A particular species travels from Alaska to Hawaii — a journey that seems impossible at first glance.

These birds bulk up for the trip, as they are unable to pull over at a diner or hotel for breaks. This sounds reminiscent of the ineffective (possibly harmful) tactic of bicyclists and similar athletes called carbohydrate loading before endurance events.

The Golden Plover makes a migratory journey that defies evolution and points to the Creator. Two aspects are understood, but a third is still baffling.
Pacific Golden Plover, Flickr / patrickkavanagh (CC BY 2.0)
Another reference to bicycling is applicable: drafting. People have learned from birds in flight to trade off duties in leading the V formation, which reduces wind resistance. Bicyclists have a paceline, where the lead rider takes the brunt of the wind while those following close behind have easier going. The leader drops off after a spell, then the next in line is at the head. They keep rotating. V formation flying has that drafting effect. Golden plovers load up on food before the journey, plus they use efficient flying for their fantastic journey.

Eating and flying right are two evidences of the Creator's design work, and stand against the randomness of universal common descent evolution. Oh, and there is one other detail that supports creation and stymies evolution: The next generation.
The animal kingdom contains many marvels that modern science has yet to fully explain. One example concerns the migration flight of the golden plover.

The Pacific golden plover (Pluvialis fulva) is a small shorebird, about the size of a dove. It lives from northern Siberia to western Alaska. Every year, these birds leave their young and fly south to spend the winter in South Asia, Southeast Asia, Australasia, or on various Pacific islands.

Of the Alaska-dwelling members of this species, almost all (including those stopping en route to more distant destinations) make a migratory flight to Hawaii. . .

Amazingly, for an individual plover to fly this distance would require more energy than is stored in its body.

To read it all, take the trip to "The golden plover — Designed for energy conservation in flight."