Unsecured Penguin Causes Helicopter Crash After Hitting Pilot’s Controls in Freak Accident

Unsecured Penguin Causes Helicopter Crash After Hitting Pilot's Controls in Freak Accident

The crash occurred just after take off from Bird Island in South Africa’s Eastern Cape, according to reports

Flying helicopter in the sky and African penguins
A stock photo of a helicopter; a penguin in Cape Town, South Africa. Photo: Getty; Murat Ozgur Guvendik/Anadolu via Getty

A penguin was reportedly the cause of a helicopter crash in South Africa.

According to the BBC and U.K. newspaper The Telegraph, a report by the South African Civil Aviation Authority stated that the unsecured bird, which had been put in a cardboard box, slipped off a passenger’s lap and hit the pilot’s controls on Jan. 19.

The crash occurred just after take off from Bird Island in South Africa’s Eastern Cape, per the BBC.

According to NBC News, the helicopter was about 50 feet into the air when “the cardboard box slid off to the right and onto the pilot’s cyclic pitch control lever.”

The helicopter then rolled before its rotor blades hit the ground and it crashed on its right side.

PEOPLE has contacted the South African Civil Aviation Authority for comment.

CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA - NOVEMBER 6: A view of African penguins, whose population has been declining at a dangerous rate in the last quarter century, in Cape Town, South Africa on November 6, 2024. The number of African penguins, which live only on the coasts of South Africa and Namibia, could become extinct by 2035 due to due to human and climatic factors if necessary measures are not taken.
A penguin in Cape Town, South Africa.Murat Ozgur Guvendik/Anadolu via Getty

According to NBC News, the report said, “None of the occupants was injured; the penguin was also unharmed.

“The lack of secure containment for the penguin” was the reason for the “dangerous situation”, the South African Civil Aviation Authority said in the report, per The Telegraph.

According to the outlet, the four-seat helicopter was carrying out an aerial survey of Bird Island.

STOCK Flying helicopter in the sky
Stock image of a helicopter.Getty

The BBC reported that the aircraft then landed to pick up a specialist who asked for the penguin to be taken back to Port Elizabeth, a city to the west of Bird Island.

The report did not state why the penguin had been picked up, per the outlet.

The aviation authority said the pilot conducted a “risk assessment,” but did not include the transportation of the penguin onboard, which “was not in accordance with the Civil Aviation Regulations (CAR) 2011.”

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According to The Telegraph, the report stated that all “established safety protocols” and aviation safety procedures should be adhered to during transportation.

Officials also added that a thorough evaluation of the potential risks should have been carried out before the flight.

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