Amy takes the eggs, hatches them, and becomes the "imprint mother" to 16 goslings. When local wildlife authorities refuse to allow the "imprinted" geese to migrate naturally (they have no wild mother to teach them), Amy and Thomas build a fleet of ultralight aircraft to lead the birds from Ontario to a safe winter habitat in South Carolina.
Just rewatched Fly Away Home for the first time in 20 years. Still cried. Fly Away Home
It sounds like you're looking for the correct way to present or cite the title Fly Away Home — likely in a piece of writing (an essay, a blog post, a social media caption, or a video description). Amy takes the eggs, hatches them, and becomes
While the film provides a visual anchor, the phrase "Fly Away Home" draws its power from an older, deeper well: the American spiritual tradition, specifically the song "I'll Fly Away." Still cried
The narrative pivot occurs when Amy discovers a nest of abandoned goose eggs. She incubates them, and when they hatch, she becomes their "mother." The film’s central conflict—and its greatest triumph—arises from the biological reality that the geese must migrate south for the winter, but they have no parents to show them the way.