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lonestar
04-20-2012, 01:38 PM
Birds Force Delta Emergency Landing At JFK
April 20, 2012


A bird strike forced a Delta Air Lines flight bound for Los Angeles to make an emergency return to New York's John F Kennedy Airport 10 minutes after takeoff on Thursday, authorities said.

The pilot of Delta Flight 1063 reported an engine-related problem and landed the Boeing 757 safely at the New York airport at 3 pm, said a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

"Flight 1063 was on take-off when the aircraft encountered a bird strike" in its right engine, said Anthony Black, a Delta spokesman. "As a precaution, the captain returned to JFK."

There were no injuries reported.

It was not clear how many birds or what kind of birds were involved.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees airports in metropolitan New York, said the pilot reported the "engine issue" 10 minutes into the flight.

In January 2009, a US Airways plane piloted by Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger landed on the Hudson River after it struck a flock of geese just after take-off at New York's LaGuardia Airport and lost power in both engines.

All 155 passengers and crew survived the splash-landing that came to be dubbed "Miracle on the Hudson."

Such strikes are not uncommon. The FAA maintains a page on its website dedicated to wildlife strikes and said there were 121,000 strikes, mostly birds, between 1990 and 2010, averaging 26 strikes a day in recent years.

(Reuters)


My wife was supposed to be on that flight, but she showed up to the airport earlier and took the flight before this one..

ant1999e
04-20-2012, 05:39 PM
This is a big deal for the Air Force. We spend lots of time trying to fight the bird problem.

lonestar
04-21-2012, 04:06 PM
This is a big deal for the Air Force. We spend lots of time trying to fight the bird problem.

Mostly all y'all do is fly..

I do not understand why they are unable to get rid of the bird populations near airports..

Afterall they are not worth more than human lives..

ant1999e
04-21-2012, 05:16 PM
It's a very difficult problem. You can't control mother nature and don't want to just kill off a bunch of birds. You have wetlands, migration patterns and other such things that attract birds. When I was stationed in Omaha, the end of the runway has a natural wetlands area. It will cost a few million dollars to get rid of it. And we had some Bald Eagles that lived around the area, couldn't do anything to them.