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    Categories: Animals/Petslife

During A Pre-Flight Check Engineers Found An Owl Napping Inside The Engine Of The Plane


Engineers were surprised to find an owl hiding inside the engine of a plane when they were on pre-flight checks.

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The staff with Virgin Australia caught a small owl taking a nap and relaxing when the plane was parked in Melbourne Airport.

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“This owl didn’t give a hoot where it napped!” tweeted Virgin Australia. “The cute little guy was found during our pre-flight checks.”

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“Our team of engineers rescued it and it was checked out before being safely released back into the wild.”

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The team of engineers rescued the bird and properly checked it before releasing it back into the wild.

The owner of Virgin, Richard Branson, read the tweet and replied: “Just when I thought I’d seen it owl… Great job team,” to which the team said, “You’re talon us!”

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This isn’t the first case when a bird was caught at an airport. The same incidents happened earlier too.

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Earlier this year, a stowaway myna bird managed to board a plane from Singapore to London, and no one noticed it for 12 hours. And also, earlier this month, a rogue flamingo caused a commotion at Palma de Mallorca Airport in Spain.

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Bird strikes commonly happen every day, and while most of the strikes happen without consequence, they can damage the aircraft in a small percentage of cases. Sometimes bird strikes can even result in fatal accidents, 229 lives have been lost since 1988 due to planes and birds tangling with each other.

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The US Airways plane is an example, that was, fortunately, landed on the Hudson River in 2009. It was brought down by a double engine failure caused by multiple bird strikes.

“Bird strikes have always been a part of aviation” and “usually cause no more than minor damage,” according to Boeing who creates many of the commercial planes flying the sky.

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