A passenger jet has been forced to turn back an hour into a flight after a swarm of bees was sucked into one of its engines.
The Palmair Boeing 737 had just taken off from Bournemouth International Airport bound for Portugal, when it flew into the swarm shortly after takeoff. The pilot reported an engine surge nearly an hour into the journey and had to return on one engine.
During the flight, passengers had become increasingly alarmed as rattling noises came from the engine and were reassured by the pilot, who assumed that it was simply "carburettor trouble". It was only after the aircraft had been checked over by engineers on the ground that they realised what had caused the problem.
David Skillicorn, Palmair's managing director, said: "The engine looked as if someone had shaken 1,000 cans of coke and sprayed them onto it. This was not life-threatening because they [bees] came out of the back of the engine, but we must check each fan for any possible damage."
Mr Skillicorn added that bees flying into an aircraft's engine was an extremely rare event and that the engines were designed to cope with bird strikes.
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