Friday, April 17, 2026

Why Don't Airplanes Flap Their Wings?

"Come on, Emil!" Billy said to his brother excitedly. "We have to go watch them take off this morning!" 

Emil looked up from his book. Billy was dressed to go out. Suddenly, Emil remembered that today was the big day!

"I can't believe I forgot!" Emil exclaimed, "I can hardly wait!" 

Billy handed him his jacket to wear, because it was cool outdoors.

The boys arrived downstairs to find Jolena waiting for them by the front door.

"Let's go," Jolena said. "We don't want to be late!"

The three dolls let themselves out through the big front door. 

Jolena had already taken the bicycles and helmets out of the store room, so they were ready to go. All the dolls needed to do was put on their helmets to protect the air inside their heads. (That air is where pretend doll brains are!)

The dolls rode along the trail that led to the park in the woods. 

Soon their destination––a human-person-size bench facing a long strip of paved open space––was in sight.

They left their bicycles leaning against the bench and took off their helmets. 

Then they climbed up onto the bench and looked at the strip of paved open space. That strip of paved open space was an airstrip, the runway for the small airport near them. Small planes could take off and land there. (They are called "small," but they are big enough to carry real human people.)

The Writer had told them that she had found out some real human neighbors who had a plane in a hangar (or a plane garage) in this airport would be using the runway to take off this morning. They finally had a chance to see it happen! 

The dolls had seen the planes fly right over their street before, on the way to land at the small airport 


They had seen the planes fly over their street just after taking off.


It didn't happen often, but when they heard a small plane coming close, they always ran out to watch. They had seen the small planes up close, flying over, but they had never seen a plane actually take off or land. This was their chance!

When all three dolls were seated facing the runway, Jolena offered the two boys some doll-size mini donuts to pretend to eat while they waited. She had brought three.


"I found these in a box in the cereal cabinet," Jolena said after they had finished pretending to eat the little donuts. "It's nice to have doll-size donuts, but I don't understand why they come in such huge boxes. There are enough donuts in each box for our whole school to pretend to eat!"

Suddenly they heard something that sounded like an engine starting. It was far away, but the sound definitely came from the direction of the opposite end of the runway. They cocked their heads and tried to listen.

Jolena and Billy listened with their doll ears. Emil used his special glasses to listen. They knew that you can hear the plane before you can see it. That's how they always knew when a plane was going over the house. They were excited. They were so glad their eyes don't close, because they didn't want to miss it!

The engine seemed to be running for a few minutes, but it sounded just as far away, and there was nothing to see. They waited.

"I think they're checking to be sure everything is ready for takeoff," Billy guessed. "They don't want to get up in the air and discover they forgot something."

"Like not having enough fuel," Emil agreed.

"Listen!" Jolena exclaimed. "I think they're moving! It sounds like they're getting closer!"

The dolls listened. It did sound as though the engine was getting louder. 

Soon they could see the plane coming their way. It rolled along the ground toward them.

"You can see it now!" Billy exclaimed.

"It's picking up speed!" he shouted. (He had to shout, because the plane's engine was getting very loud, and doll voices are heard in your head, so they aren't very loud unless the doll shouts.)

"It has to go really fast," Emil shouted, "or it will stay on the ground and crash through the fence!" He was almost afraid to look...but he couldn't NOT look.

The dolls watched as the plane came closer and closer. Would it make it into the air before it reached the fence? Would it roll through the fence and roll right over the bench they were on?

Then suddenly, the plane left the ground. It flew over the fence at the end of the runway. It flew over their heads.

The dolls looked up and watched the plane. 

Then they jumped up and turned around on the bench to watch the plane fly away. When it got high up, it went around in a circle. As it did, one wing tipped lower than the other. They watched until the plane disappeared over the trees and was gone. Billy waved to the plane. He didn't think the human people in the plane could see him, but it made him feel good to wave at them.

"That was fun," Billy said.

"Yes," Emil agreed. "Too bad we don't know when another plane will take off or land."

They all thought that it was indeed too bad. They would have liked to see it again.

"Planes don't flap their wings, the way birds do," said Billy, "I wonder how planes can fly without flapping their wings."

"I'll bet it has something to do with how I can guide my landings when I'm doing aerials," said Jolena, who is on the Doll Ski Team and does tricks when she flies through the air on her skis.


She was remembering her last training session, in the summer, when she and her teammates used the ski jump to ski down, do their tricks in the air and then land in the pool at the base of the ski jump. She knew she used the air and the wind, and she could do it, but she didn't understand exactly how that worked.

All three dolls wondered about that how the plane could fly.

"Let's ask Mandy!" they all exclaimed at once.

The dolls could hardly wait until they got home, so they could ask Mandy. Mandy would know. They quickly put on their helmets, hopped onto their bicycles and rode home as fast as they could.

When they got home, they took off their jackets and put them away. They were ready to look for Mandy. 

Mandy knows a lot of things about how the world works, and if there's something she doesn't know, she knows how to find out.

The dolls found Mandy in the living room, knitting. She looked up when they came in.

"Mandy," Emil said as the dolls had climbed up on the couch, "We were wondering how airplanes can fly without flapping their wings."

"Yes," Jolena agreed. "We were just at the airstrip watching a plane take off. We started to wonder about it."

Mandy moved her knitting to the couch and put her glasses on the top of her head. "Sure," she said. "It will be easier, though, if we see what a plane looks like while we talk about it. Let's go over to the table," she suggested. "I think there's some paper and a pencil there."

The dolls slid down off the couch, ran into the dining room and climbed up on two of the chairs. Mandy picked up a piece of paper and a pencil from the supplies that had been set out for the dolls' homework and, after putting her glasses back on her nose, quickly drew a picture of an airplane. It was an amazingly good drawing for a doll who was not an artist, but Mandy has a great imagination!

"Let's start with the four forces," she suggested, as the other three dolls made sure their listening ears were in place. (Listening ears are inside your head. They are what help you pay attention, so Emil's listening ears work just as well as Billy's and Jolena's.)

"The Four Forces," Billy said. "That sounds like a team of superheroes!"

"They sort of are superheroes," Mandy agreed, "and they have to work together. Without working together, they could never get planes off the ground! Let's take these superheroes one at a time," she continued. "First, do you know why we don't just float off into space? What holds us to the earth?"

"I know that," Jolena said, raising her hand. "It's gravity (GRA-vih-tee). I learned about it in ski school, and then at regular school. It's what makes us heavy. It's why we can ski downhill but have to ride the lift back up."

"Very good," Mandy agreed. "Now, do you know what that heaviness is called?" she asked.

"Um," Billy said, "is that what you call weight?" 

"Yes," Mandy agreed. "Weight (WATE) is the force that causes gravity to pull us down, and that's one of the four forces I was talking about." Mandy drew an arrow going down under the airplane to show that it was affected by weight.

Then Mandy waited, to let the other three dolls think about that. "There's another force that can lift us up," she said, drawing an arrow pointing upward above the airplane. "Now," she asked, "what do you think that force is called?"

"Happy thoughts" Jolena asked? "Happy thoughts lift us up."

"Well," Mandy said, "happy thoughts lift us up on the inside, and a pilot who has happy thoughts will probably find it easier to fly the plane, but happy thoughts won't make the plane fly if we can't use the four forces correctly."

"I don't suppose the force that lifts could be called lift," Emil conjectured. "That would be too simple."

"That is the word for it, actually," Mandy agreed, "and it is simple. Lift is the force that makes something go up. It's what helps hold an airplane in the air." Mandy used the pencil to point to the arrow she had just drawn.

"Weight and lift can work against each other," Mandy explained, "but when the plane is built right, the way the body and the wings are shaped make weight and lift work together." She paused and thought for a moment. "How can I demonstrate this?" she asked herself.

Suddenly Mandy said, "Come, I just thought of a way I can show you!" She slid down from the chair and walked to the kitchen. She turned at the door to the kitchen and beckoned the other dolls to follow, because they were still at the table.

When they had pulled some stools over to the sink, Mandy took off her shoes, so they wouldn't get wet. Then she got into the sink and filled a pan with water while the other dolls gathered around.

Next, Mandy went over to the tools pitcher next to the stove and pulled out the rice paddle. "This is sort of like an airplane wing," Mandy said to herself. Then she came back to the sink.

Mandy put the paddle into the water and moved it gently back and forth. "This will work," she said, clearly pleased. "When you move the paddle through the water, back and forth like this, then tip the paddle up slightly as you move it through the water in that direction, you can feel it try to go up."

Then she let the other dolls try. Each one had a try, one after another, so they could feel feel the pressure of the water making the paddle go up.

The dolls left the water for The Writer to use to water the plants, so it wouldn't be wasted. Mandy's feet were wet, so Jolena handed her a towel to dry off her feet before she put her shoes back on.

"My ski teacher told us the air is just like water, only thinner," Jolena said while Mandy was drying off.

"The water is a liquid," Emil put in, remembering what he learned in school, "and the air is a gas. A gas is thinner, I think."

The dolls went back to the dining room. "Yes," Mandy agreed. "It works almost the same way in both water and air," she said as the they climbed back up on the dining room chairs, "only it takes more to stay up in the air than it does to stay up in water. Planes have propellers or jet engines to make them move, and it's the only way they can fly because they are heavier than the air. Planes have to keep moving, and so do birds, to stay up in the air."

"What about hummingbirds?" Jolena asked. "They can float in one place in the air while they drink from a flower."

"And what about helicopters?" Billy asked. "They can stay in one place, too."

"Hummingbirds are able to hover (HUH-ver), or stay in one place," Mandy replied, "but their wings have to keep moving. Hummingbird wings can move so fast you almost can't see them."

"Helicopters have wings that spin around over the body," Mandy continued. "It looks like a propeller, but the blades are really specially built wings. You can hardly see them when the helicopter is flying, because they move so fast."

"Both hummingbirds and helicopters are still moving when they appear to float in the air," Mandy explained. "They won't stay in the air if they don't keep moving, and regular airplanes have to keep moving, too, but they have to always move forward to fly."

"You also have to move forward to take off and land," Billy added thoughtfully. "We just saw how the plane had to drive along the landing strip like a car, going faster and faster, still on the ground until it was going fast enough to take off."

"You're right!" Mandy agreed, "and that's where the other two forces come in." She pulled the picture of the airplane toward herself and picked up the pencil again.

"That forward movement" Mandy explained, "is created by the engines, and it's called thrust." She drew an arrow pointing away from the front of the plane. "That's the third of the four forces needed for an airplane to fly."


"And the third member of our team of superheroes," Billy said, nodding.

All the dolls agreed with that.

"Finally," Mandy went on, "you need a long runway for an airplane to take off, because, as you saw, it has to have enough speed to overcome the fourth force, which is drag." She drew an arrow pointing away from the back of the airplane.

"What's drag, then?" Billy asked.

"That's the force that holds the airplane back when it's trying to get up in the air and stay here," Mandy replied. "It's made by the air the plane has to get through. It's like what you felt with the paddle in the water."

"I've heard of that!" Jolena exclaimed excitedly. "It's like you're dragging something! My ski teacher said that's why we have to crouch down low and make ourselves as small as possible when we're skiing downhill or down the ski jump. She says it reduces drag."

"That's right," Mandy agreed. "You want to go faster, and drag slows you down. Drag is what makes a parachute work. It slows down the force of weight, so someone can land safely."

"Planes have to be shaped so there's less drag when they take off and fly." Mandy explained. "Just as weight and lift can work against each other," she continued, "thrust and drag can work against each other. The airplane has to be designed right to get them to work together." Mandy emphasized her point by getting the other dolls to look at the picture of the plane she had drawn.

"For the plane to get off the ground," she said, "thrust has to overcome drag, but the plane is designed to do that by using the four forces to take off, fly and land safely." Mandy put the pencil down, as if to say she was finished with her explanation.

"Our question," Emil pointed out, "was really how planes can fly without flapping their wings. Now that I have an idea of how planes can fly, I'm wondering why birds have to flap their wings. Why don't they just fly the way planes fly."

"Oh, yes," Mandy said. "Thanks for reminding me we weren't done. You see, birds don't often just go up into the air, fly somewhere and then land. They need to take off and land over and over with little space. They don't have engines to give them the thrust they need to get off the ground. They use their wings to go over and under the air over and over, sort of how a swimmer moves through the water." She made motions with her arms that mimicked a swimmer moving through the water.

"Birds," Mandy went on, "use the same techniques as an airplane or a ski jumper when they are already up in the sky or take off from the top of a tree, but they have to be able to take off from the ground, too."

"There's another good reason," Mandy continued, "and a very important one, why airplanes don't flap their wings, even if they could be built to do that."

The other three dolls looked at Mandy.

"Human people are not used to being joggled around," Mandy said, looking around at the others. "They can get used to having the floor move while they're standing or sitting on it, but flapping wings would make the plane bounce up and down much more. It would make all the passengers sick, and not pretend sick, either."


All four dolls wondered what it would be like for being tossed around or shaken up to make you sick. What if it made you sick to fall on the floor or to bounce up and down in the back of a wagon or if someone got upset and threw you across the room?

It was beyond their imaginations, which are very, very good.

"So airplanes don't flap their wings because it would make the passengers sick," Billy said.

"Yes," Mandy agreed. "If I had just answered your question that way, I would have gotten more knitting done."

"But we wouldn't have learned about the four superheroes!" Emil pointed out.

"The Four Forces!" Billy agreed.

Cast--
Mandy: Götz Happy Kidz Katie 2015
Jolena: Götz Happy Kidz Lena in Aspen
Billy: Götz Happy Kidz Lily at London
Emil: Götz Happy Kidz Emilia
Marmalade: Purrrfect Cats from KTL

Want to find out more? The Kidz do, too. Mandy's explanation is just an introduction to what enables airplanes to fly. You can learn more, and it's very interesting.

Want to find out more about how the shape of a plane's wings helps lift and drag work together? Check out this NASA link!

Photo of plane flying over the dolls by Cody Fitzgerald on Unsplash

Hummingbird photo by Nathan Anderson on Unsplash (cropped)

Helicopter photo by Greg Rosenke on Unsplash

Parachute photo by Ernesto Velázquez on Unsplash

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Note: No dolls were harmed during production of this blog. All dolls shown are Götz Happy Kidz, Classic Kidz or Little Kidz. If you like these stories and are willing, please make a donation of any amount to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or any organization that supports pediatric cancer research and treatment. We are not affiliated with St. Jude in any way other than these donations.

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Watch for the next story each Friday afternoon at 1:00 PM Pacific Time.

Do you like our stories? Some of them are available in print:

The stories in Mariah: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Being LittleBesties and Distraction.

The stories in Emil: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Best BudsGetting What You Want and The Boys Cook Dinner.

The stories in Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Little Green GreatcoatThe Boy Doll Who Cried Wolf and Lost in the Woods.

Our book of poems, Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook includes Valentine's DayKeeping PetsBack to School, Victor the VultureThe Week Before Christmas, Insomnia and Veronika's Vocabulary Verses.

The stories in More Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Welcoming a StrangerThe RescueUnmaskedFuzzy Town––A Play and Sky Blue.

Available now from BookBaby and other booksellers: Billy: Stories from The Doll's Storybook. The Stories in Billy: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Talking About BoysChangesShhhhh!Staying After and Money in a Jar.


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Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.

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Why Don't Airplanes Flap Their Wings?

"Come on, Emil!" Billy said to his brother excitedly. "We have to go watch them take off this morning!"  Emil looked up ...