Updated September 21st, 2019 at 17:43 IST

Pilot sees baby hedgehog on runway, stops flight take-off

A pilot of a Scottish airplane stopped the take-off when a baby hedgehog began wandered into the runway

Reported by: Apoorva Rao
| Image:self
Advertisement

A pilot of a Scottish airplane stopped the take-off when a baby hedgehog began wandered into the runway. A Loganair flight was taxiing at Stornoway Airport when the animal appeared on its runway. The pilot saw the hoglet crossing the runway and stopped the aircraft for two minutes. Stornoway is located in the Isle of Lewis, in Scotland.

READ | Flight makes emergency landing after pilot spills coffee on ACP

Baby hedgehog cross runway

The incident happened at 5.30 pm on Thursday. There were 30 passengers on the plane. They were informed of the delay in their journey. Neil Hughes, Loganair's director of flight operations said to the media that 'the captain avoided the prickly situation for the little hedgehog'. He said that the flights' operations run deep into rural Scotland and pilots scan the runway for wild animals and often encounter them. He added that they are conscious to not disturb them. 

READ | Close shave at Mangalore airport as Air India flight overshoots runway, gets stuck in run-off grass

Swarm of bees in front of plane in Kolkata

A Kolkata-Agartala Air India flight was delayed for around two hours on September 15 after a swarm of bees was noticed in front of the aircraft while it was taxiing towards the main runway here, an airline official said. The plane with 136 passengers and crew members onboard the AI 743 flight was scheduled to depart at 9.40 am. The bees were noticed by the pilots when the Airbus A319 was moving towards the runway for the take-off. The pilots brought the aircraft to a standstill as further movement could have damaged the plane and harmed the passengers if the bees entered it through the engines, the Air India spokesperson said.

READ | Bees create havoc on runway, cause delay in an Air India flight

World Cup match halted after swarm of bees enter ground

The World Cup match between Sri Lanka and South Africa on Friday was halted for a brief period after a swarm of bees entered the centre of the ground in Chester-le-Street. Players and on-field umpires were forced to hit the ground to save themselves after a swarm of bees entered the field, but luckily none was stung by the insects. The interruption occurred for about a minute in the A 48th over of Sri Lanka's innings.  A similar incident occurred in 2017, the bees had halted the match at Wanderers Stadium when South Africa hosted Sri Lanka in Johannesburg.  

WATCH: Swarm of bees show love for South Africa-Sri Lanka clash for the second time, cause interruption in World Cup encounter

Baby hedgehog appears on runway, causes flight delay

Advertisement

Published September 21st, 2019 at 16:35 IST