Horse-Forced Landing Throws Plane Off-Course

You read that headline right. Apparently, a Boeing 747 flying from New York to Belgium was forced to return to JFK after a horse on board "escaped from its stall."

A horse is loaded into an Air France horse transport pod

Note: This photo is not of the horse in question.

MARTIN BUREAU/AFP/AFP via Getty Images

The plane was around 31,000 feet in the air when the pilot contacted Boston air traffic control. "We have [a] live animal, [a] horse on board the airplane," the pilot told them. "And the horse managed to escape the stall."

"The horse managed to escape the stall."

Side note, that recording is wild to hear. You should listen to it.

Taro Hama @e-kamakura / Getty Images

The pilot said that they didn't have any problems flying, but that the plane needed to return to New York because the crew couldn't re-secure the horse.

race horses in rows of 3 being readied to load into a cargo plane

Note: This image also does not contain the horse in question. We currently know next to nothing about our mystery horse.

Leila Melhado / Getty Images/iStockphoto

"We don't have a problem...flying-wise," the pilot told air traffic control, "but we need to return, return back to New York. We cannot get the horse back secured."

A screenshot of the YouTube video that is a reconstruction of the pilot / air traffic control communications. an icon of an airplane is projected on a map south of Massachusetts
You Can See ATC / Via youtube.com

Side note: According to CNN, apparently even horses travel in either first class, business class, or economy when flying. I need to know more about this particular horse and how it was traveling. Maybe she just wanted some of the honeycrisp apples they were giving out in first?

A pinto pony is tempted by an apple, set on a fencepost on a bright sunny day
Driftlessstudio / Getty Images

Apparently, less than 30 minutes into the flight, the plane pulled an abrupt U-turn somewhere near Boston. What's more, they notified Boston air traffic control that due to their weight, they would need to dump 20 tons of fuel. They ended up dumping the fuel around 10 miles west of Martha's Vineyard.

A Boeing 747-800 prepares taxies onto the runway

I had never thought about how a plane landing early would need to dump fuel because of the weight. That it was 20 tons of fuel blew me away (I think I'm just ignorant of how much fuel a Boeing 747 eats up); and I had to know the cost.

Eric8669 / Getty Images

I looked it up, and according to Reuters, jet fuel prices for Northwest Europe "were at $878 per metric ton" as of November 2. So, that's a little over $17,500 of fuel.

An airplane is filled with fuel on the tarmac
Tobias Titz / Getty Images/fStop

The pilot did request that a veterinarian be present at the plane's landing in New York, but there's no indication that the horse was injured. Currently the airline, Air Atlanta Icelandic, has not responded to a BuzzFeed request for comment.

a horse in a sterile room with multiple vets
Tom Werner / Getty Images

There were some pretty punny tweets about the situation:

Twitter: @MikeBeauvais

Twitter: @TheMSeries1

Twitter: @Ryanair

(Sad because I had already come up with this pun to use in a headline.)

Twitter: @aviosAdventurer

Twitter: @thomdunn

...And now, we need to debrief. Logically, I know that horses who travel internationally travel on airplanes. It's just that for some reason, I still imagined them traveling by...ship? Maybe that's just me. I guess this is, like, a more modern twist on a Black Stallion situation.

From Black Stallion: a boy rides a black horse on a beach against an ocean background
United Artists / ©United Artists/Courtesy Everett Collection

But I have so many more questions than have currently been answered. WHOSE HORSE IS THIS? Despite my best journalistic efforts, I have been unable to find out.

MISTER ED the horse, from the TV show Mister Ed, and Wilbur, his human, on the set of Mister Ed
Richard R. Hewett / TV Guide / courtesy Everett Collection

I feel like this story is missing some key points. Number one: What exactly went down with this horse on this plane? And how is it doing? Number two: Were there any other horses aboard the aircraft? Number three: Yes, I know that horses travel on planes. But I want to know why this horse happened to be going to Belgium. Who is this diva?

a horse's head and neck in profile
mgstudyo / Getty Images

Let me know your thoughts. Or, better, if you know this horse, let me know the details!