This one is a
better show of the bird reflex to dive. I didn't embed it only because it contains NSFW profanity. You can see the bird reacts quickly then realized tucking wont work, so it goes wings out again and accepts its fate. That's the coffin corner, bird slightly above your eyeline. The birds dive or stay, you don't have enough time to put your nose and belly into it as a shield, and it goes right into your nugget. I can't show you the video of the guy who decided to dive instead, as that one is safety privileged and was never released to the youboobers, but it's a real close call. As I say, homeboi left one of his main wheels stuck in a chainlink fence, if that tells you anything.
At any rate, that video is also pretty textbook canopy breach in our fleet, and has resulted in fatalities associated with impact loss of consciousness. The issuance of the thicker windshield forward of the canopy lid was also a result of the aircraft fatalities resultant of front occupant loss of consciousness. Our current threat is mostly now centered around the actual canopy lid, which still retains the old thin specs, with the forward windshield being the thicker spec. You can still get smacked pretty good in the back, and people have as recently as a few years ago.
Last bird related loss was in Oklahoma leading to ejection due to dual hydraulic failure as a result of ingestion damage that lead to a fire that burned through both system lines. But that one was not a canopy breach.
In any event, yeah, birds tuck and dive. Repeatable enough behavior to warrant that generic advice I proffered earlier. I don't fly with a helmet on in GA, so my only recourse is tucking under the panel. It's a mediocre plan, but it's at much slower speeds than I fly in the -38, and I already consider the acceptance of flying my lawnmower a mediocre life choice in the first place, so the imprudence is a sunk cost *shrugs*. I am considering helmet wear once I get into the RV, since I plan on doing acro and formation work, along with parachute wear for formation, given the higher mid air collision risk. The bird resistance benefit to helmet wear would be ancillary.