Denali
Senior Member
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2012
- Posts
- 6,060
Kudu on the runway and baboons alongside...
Just reminded me.
Lady Elliot Island. Had to stop the cricket game and ask the players to move off the runway for us to depart.
Kudu on the runway and baboons alongside...
My strangest delay occurred about 4 years ago on a MEL-SYD flight; just before pushback a sparrow was found flying around the cabin and had to be caught and ejected before we could depart! Just to add to the interest, I found myself sitting next to John Howard (the ex-PM, not the actor) on this flight. (There is a thread on this in the Qantas forum).
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Cows on the run way...
In Singapore, back around 2000. A lightning strike took out the regional control centre...which basically meant that nobody was controlling any of the aircraft in the region. Tower, approach, everyone, was off the air. I was very glad that I was on the ground listening to it, and not in the air trying not to run into someone else. A BA pilot, who was obviously an air traffic controller in a previous life, managed to restore some order for a while, until the BA guy himself had to divert.
There was a Delta flight heading into NRT, about 100 miles away when the 2011 Tōhoku quake happened. NRT closed. A few flights got cleared into HND, before that also closed. The DL flight headed for NGO, was half way there when it closed. Same for KIX. Yokoda was full. They were told to head to Misawa, then go past that to CTS, where they finally landed after having to declare a fuel emergency to avoid another hold.Didn't think about it then but knowing how much traffic there is in the area, must be an absolute nightmare if all airports in a region are off limits with no forewarning.
Wow. Is there no backup?
I was flying PDX-SEA. Next door was a flight PDX-BOI. The flight was delayed as the toilets weren't working and pax were advised to go before boarding.
Not particularly common, but common enough that it isn't remarkable. The braking should be gentle, as there's actually a good chance than any immoderate braking will lift the nose off the ground.1- Aircraft starts push back procedure followed by a strange noise and full breaks...the towbar had split in two, now that's a piece of equipment I never thought could fail.
Lifting tugs are fairly common, especially when pushing back large aircraft. They provide a much smoother, better controlled push, without the risk of a broken drawbar. I saw one fail to release in LA earlier this year...took the engineers about 15 minutes with their more subtle tools to get us away. Provided a rather funny video for us to watch.2- To continue on the towing theme. QF9 pushes back from the terminal and after 15 minutes the captain tell us that they are unable to remove the tow truck from the aircraft! JB747 later explained to me that MEL airport had acquired a new type of tow truck which actually lifts the front wheel of the aircraft so that sometimes it's difficult to release the wheel. Took 1 hour to get it sorted.
Any chance that is PNG swanning_it ?
(don't ask me about my Kokoda training, the pig, the drunks and the state of emergency officers ... I had to wash my underpants after that one)! :mrgreen:
A beer! Sold.Ok, now i HAVE to ask but will buy you a beer first when our paths cross!
Way back in 89.... we were heading off on an amazingly priced package deal to the "Indonesian International Skydiving Championships and Boogie in Bali" lol
Garuda flight number ,,but aircraft was from a US Charter company and crewed by Americans. It was a DC-10. I believe it was during the Haji when the "real" Garuda aircraft were carrying pilgrims....
We were delayed because they were "having a little trouble closing the aft cargo door"....:shock::shock::shock:
Not so much strange....as frightening.......
As an aside... we were allowed to take our parachute rigs onboard as carry on......... that caused some interesting looks from the non-skydivers onboard.....