https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-49355236
A Russian passenger plane has made an emergency landing in a cornfield near Moscow after striking a flock of birds.
At least 74 people were injured in the incident, which saw the plane land with its engines off and landing gear retracted, emergency officials said.
[...] The Kremlin on Thursday hailed the pilots as heroes for "saving people's lives and landing the plane". A spokesman said they would receive state awards soon.
The airline said the plane was significantly damaged and would not fly again. An official investigation is under way.
[...] The plane had more than 230 passengers and crew on board when the birds were reportedly sucked into its engines and the crew immediately decided to land.
[...] Collisions between birds and planes are a common occurrence in aviation, with thousands reported every year in the US alone. However, they rarely result in accidents or cause damage to the aircraft.
Flight is U6178 Moscow-Simferopol, plane was VQ-BOZ.
Reports say one engine was out and the other was badly damaged so the crew shut it off. But on this video I can hear some engine noise: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0f893GhbiBA
Glide-landing 7 crew, 226 passengers, and ~6 tons of jet fuel safely in a corn field is undoubtedly an achievement.
(Score: 5, Informative) by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us on Friday August 16 2019, @02:25PM
The key being "dirt levee", as in the ground was compacted, reasonably level, and ended up taking the weight of the plane distributed on the gears. Same story for dirt and grass landing fields (although there are reasons why 737's don't normally land on grass landing fields). One has to fly the conditions one finds and use the superior pilot's judgment to determine what one does, which doesn't change the general principle of better-to-skid-than-flip. But if you read the Wikipedia on TACA 110 they were prepared to water ditch gear-up but then spotted the levee, "The aircraft was towed from the levee to the nearby NASA facility [Michoud], fueled to the minimum amount needed and departed from Saturn Boulevard, a roadway built atop the original World War II-era runway."
This sig for rent.