Animals Are Attacking US Airways, Run For Your Lives
"No injuries were reported when a passenger jet hit a deer Wednesday evening while taxiing at Charlotte/Douglas International Airport," reported the Charlotte Observer. An airport official told the paper that it was a "freak accident."
Calls to CEO Doug Parker inquiring as to what he did to piss off Mother Nature were not made.
It happened shortly after 7:30 p.m., when US Airways Flight 3215 arrived from Nashville and was taxiing on Runway 36C, according to the FAA. The pilot was directing the craft to a gate when it hit the deer.
The plane, an Embraer 175, was carrying 53 passengers and a crew of three.
The only casualty was to the deer, which did not survive.
US Airways plane hits deer at Charlotte/Douglas [Charlotte Observer]
(Photo:Travelin' Librarian)
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Comments:
@jamar0303: Unchecked they breed like rabbits and are as hard to eliminate as coyotes - and they adapt to suburban environments. Tough to get rid of all of them in every pocket of green space.
@Canino: Plus they pretty much fly like geese. I don't think any fencing is really deer-proof, just temporarily lucky.
@Canino: its true.
deer come down every single night from the hills behind my neighborhood and eat the grass from the park.
it's really weird to go for a night walk and suddenly see a huge family of deer running back to the hills.
@Canino: Yeah, but aren't all airports surrounded by electric fences? Otherwise what's all the security theater for?
This reminds me of a Bill Engvall joke (I was bored, it was this or watching static) about how he was on a plane, and the plane accidentally hit a deer on the runway. He calls his wife, tells her what happened, and she says, "Oh my God! Were you on the ground?"
But on topic, Dulles International over here is a massive area of runways, fences, side roads and access paths for vehicles, but there are also a good amount of woods. You can't guarantee every wooded area is wildlife free.
Just yesterday there was a stray dog loose on the runway/tarmac at Miami International airport ...
The article doesn't say much about the outcome but the local news mentioned the dog getting tired and laying down. So it was eventually caught.
@cordeliapotter: Yeah, but aren't all airports surrounded by electric fences?
I don't think so...too much liability I'm sure. I think they're just regular high fences with barbed wire at the top.
@Canino: Most airports don't even have barbed wire. Most rely solely on the deterrent that it's a federal crime to do just about anything at an airport.
Unfortunately, deer can't read. Maybe there's an earmark in the stimulus package to help rectify this.
@jamar0303: I remember an airport in Ireland where sheep were grazing butt up against the runway. Made me totally nervous. (But that whole airport experience was lot a wacky sitcom that jumped the shark.)
@Canino: And in many suburban environments, hunting isn't a popular pastime and is seen as "cruel", and there can be protests against attempts to cull the population. Which is sad because then the deer just starve.
@pecan pi: A fence can only be declared deer resistant if it is over 10'. Proof I think is pushing 15'.
@Eyebrows McGee: Which is sad because then the deer just starve.
or get hit by cars and possibly suffer slow death. Or in this case planes.
Bird Strikes and animal strikes happen almost daily at US Airports. If you go to the FAA's website about wildlife hazard mitigation, http://wildlife-mitigation.tc.faa.gov/public_html/index.html, you can read the stats on some of these strikes. For example in the past twenty years there were 14 strikes between alligators and aircraft in Florida; if you look for deer you can find that in all fifty states there was at least one strike attributed to a deer and there was a total of 811 strikes between the years 1990 and 2008. Think about that for a second. The only reason we are hearing more about these strieks is that the media is playing it up post USAIR 1549 accident. All the media is doing with stories like this is stirring up fear.
@David Brodbeck: Clearly the solution is to re-introduce their natural predators.
Hello, zoo? This is Charlotte/Douglas Airport. Do you have any extra bears we can borrow?
@David Brodbeck: THEY TOTALLY DID THAT in the forest preserve where I grew up! Suburban parents kept objecting to hunting licenses (with some merit, as the preserve backs up to tons of grade schools and it only takes one stray bullet to end in tragedy), but also to the department of natural resources doing culling ... so they brought in coyotes, which people had weirdly little problem with. Until they started carrying off toy poodles from backyards. Oh well.
@Eyebrows McGee: Carrying off people's yappy dogs would be in the plus column, for me. I bet it'd take care of the stray cat problem, too. ;)
Stuff like this happens all the time and all over the world. Aircraft, especially the newer ones like the Embraer, are really very quiet at low power setting when you are anywhere except directly in front or behind the engines. Combine that with darty animals and things happen. Sadly, people also get hit, run over or sucked through engines on a pretty regular basis.
Want to see what a buffalo does to a plane?
[www.command-post.org]
I figured a easy solution for the overpopulation of deer and geese at airports.
The kind folks @ farmersonly.com setup speed dating at the airport tarmacs. Seeing couples walk arm in arm with a ruger mini 14, taking pot shots at deer on the tarmac.
"I met Jeb @ Charlotte/Douglas International airport. I knew it was love at 1st site when he took down that 10 point buck with .270".
@Yossarian: I imagine it was like that scene in Austin Powers where he's driving that steam roller and then you see a security guard yell "NOOOO!" and Austin's yelling at him to get out of the way, then they go to a long shot, which shows them a good 100 ft apart.
@Davan: Seriously, how does a dear have access to the runway when ticket-holders barely are allowed to get on the plane because of security checks






















A deer that couldn't escape an airplane taxiing to a gate probably wasn't long for this world anyway.