Originally Posted by
excrab
would have thought a bird strike serious enough for them to return to land at Gatwick and then ground the aircraft for 24 hours would have been picked up by someone and posted on prune, as the Manchester one was a few years ago.
If the bird strike involved a forced return to Gatwick, that ought to be easy enough to find from the flight-tracking websites.
Originally Posted by
Tech Guy
Hi all, does anyone know if a Thomas Cook flight suffered a bird strike around 30th June?
Knowing the exact date would help.