
Unwelcome flyers delay Wisconsin-bound flight
A routine Delta Airlines flight from Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Airport to Wisconsin became an airborne wildlife encounter Saturday when two pigeons turned the cabin into their personal aviary. Passengers found themselves in an impromptu bird-catching operation as the feathered interlopers dodged attempts at capture. Passengers duck and scramble as pigeons turn the cabin into avian obstacle course.
Viral videos show the surreal scene: travelers screaming and ducking as one particularly energetic pigeon swooped through the cabin while its calmer companion paced beneath seats. The chaos prompted the pilot to announce:
“Ladies and gentlemen, we have a wildlife situation on the plane.”
The drama began after pushback when a passenger alerted crew members: “I think there’s a pigeon on this plane.” Moments later, the pilot confirmed a second stowaway had taken flight—literally—prompting a passenger to attempt capture with a makeshift net fashioned from a jacket.
Ground crew to the rescue
The incident culminated with:
- The aircraft returning to gate
- A Delta baggage handler apprehending the floor-walking pigeon
- Significant flight delays
- Both birds ultimately being removed safely
This isn’t the first bizarre inflight incident recently. The aviation world has seen:
- A naked woman defecating on a Southwest Airlines seat (April 2025)
- Another stripping mid-flight while claiming bipolar disorder (March 2025)
- A Dallas airport “goddess Venus” incident involving property damage
The pigeon encounter joins this growing list of unusual aviation disruptions, proving that sometimes the real in-flight entertainment writes itself—feathers and all.



