Current:Home > FinanceSouth African pilot finds cobra under seat, makes emergency landing: "I kept looking down" -ChatGPT
South African pilot finds cobra under seat, makes emergency landing: "I kept looking down"
View
Date:2025-04-13 16:04:01
A pilot in South Africa made a hasty emergency landing after discovering a highly venomous cobra hiding under his seat.
Rudolf Erasmus had four passengers on board the light aircraft during Monday's flight when he felt "something cold" slide across his lower back. He glanced down to see the head of a fairly large Cape Cobra "receding back under the seat," he said.
"It was as if my brain didn't know what was going on," he told The Associated Press.
After taking a moment to compose himself, he informed his passengers of the slippery stowaway.
"There was a moment of stunned silence," he said. Everyone stayed cool, especially the pilot.
Erasmus called air traffic control for permission to make an emergency landing in the town of Welkom in central South Africa. He still had to fly for another 10 to 15 minutes and land the plane with the snake curled up by his feet.
"I kept looking down to see where it was. It was happy under the seat," Erasmus said. "I don't have a big fear of snakes but I normally don't go near them."
Brian Emmenis, who works at Welkom radio station Gold FM and is also an aviation expert, received a phone call to see if he could help. He called the fire and rescue department, which sent emergency responders and a snake handler to meet the plane at the airport. Emmenis was first at the scene and saw everyone disembark, "visibly shaken," Emmenis said, but all safe thanks to Erasmus.
"He stayed calm and landed that aircraft with a deadly venomous Cape Cobra curled up underneath his seat," Emmenis said.
Cape Cobras are one of Africa's most dangerous cobra species because of the potency of their venom.
The drama wasn't over for the poor pilot.
Welkom snake handler Johan de Klerk and a team of aviation engineers searched the plane for the best part of two days but still hadn't found the cobra by Wednesday and were uncertain if it had sneaked out unnoticed.
The engineering company Erasmus works for wanted its plane back in the city of Mbombela in northern South Africa. So, he had to fly it back home, a 90-minute voyage with the possibility that the cobra was still onboard.
Unsurprisingly, his passengers decided to look for another way to get home.
This time Erasmus took some precautions: He wore a thick winter jacket, he said, wrapped a blanket around his seat, and had a fire extinguisher, a can of insect repellent and a golf club within arm's reach in the cockpit.
"I would say I was on high alert," Erasmus said.
The cobra didn't reappear on that flight and the plane has now been completely stripped, but still no sign of the snake, Erasmus said.
The theory is it found its way on board before Erasmus and his passengers took off at the start of their trip from the town of Worcester in the Western Cape province, where Cape Cobras are usually found in South Africa. It might have got out in Welkom or might still be hiding somewhere deep in the plane.
"I hope it finds somewhere to go," said Erasmus. "Just not my aircraft."
Snakes have been found on commercial jets in recent years. Last October, a snake was discovered on board a United Airlines passenger flight from Tampa Bay, Florida, to Newark, New Jersey. In February 2022, an AirAsia passenger flight in Malaysia, bound from Kuala Lumpur to Tawau, was forced to divert to Kuching after a snake was spotted in the overhead lights.
In 2017, a snake was found on a flight to Anchorage, Alaska, and in 2016, passengers on an Aeromexico flight to Mexico City were startled by a bright green snake dropping out of one of the luggage bins.
- In:
- South Africa
- snake
veryGood! (847)
Related
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Trump heading to Ohio to rally for GOP’s Bernie Moreno ahead of March 19 primary
- Prince William Attends Thomas Kingston’s Funeral Amid Kate Middleton Photo Controversy
- Man fatally shoots girlfriend and her adult daughters during a domestic incident, deputies say
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Purple Ohio? Parties in the former bellwether state take lessons from 2023 abortion, marijuana votes
- Jury sees bedroom photo of empty box that held gun used in Michigan school shooting
- Jury sees bedroom photo of empty box that held gun used in Michigan school shooting
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Man suspected of robberies fatally shot by Texas officers after the robbery of a liquor store
Ranking
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Explosion destroys house in Pittsburgh area; no official word on any deaths, injuries
- Supreme Court extends pause on Texas law that would allow state police to arrest migrants
- Dan + Shay serenade 'The Voice' contestant and her fiancé, more highlights from auditions
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- National Republican Chairman Whatley won’t keep other job leading North Carolina GOP
- Netanyahu dismisses Biden's warning over innocent lives being lost in Israel's war with Hamas in Gaza
- Sister Wives’ Christine Brown Shares Photos Honoring “Incredible” Garrison Brown
Recommendation
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Reports: Vikings adding free-agent QB Sam Darnold, RB Aaron Jones
Xenophobia or security precaution? Georgia lawmakers divided over limiting foreign land ownership
Judge rules missing 5-year-old girl legally dead weeks after father convicted of killing her
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Proof Channing Tatum Is Already a Part of Zoë Kravitz’s Family
What Nick Saban believed in for 50 years 'no longer exist in college athletics'
Oscars 2024 red carpet fashion and key moments from Academy Awards arrivals