Hawke's Bay Today

Plane crash at Napier Airport

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Two people walked away almost uninjured from a light plane which was upended in a wind gust at Hawke’s Bay Airport yesterday while the aircraft was in Napier for the Art Deco Festival.

Police, fire and ambulance services were called to the airport at midday, with the airport’s own rescue services already alongside the aircraft, one of two World War II Boeing Stearman trainer aircraft.

The biplane was flipped on its back on one of the airport’s grass runways.

Napier’s Art Deco festival was being held over the weekend and light planes were running demonstrat­ion flights, photograph­er Mike Gannaway said. He was in a group of spectators watching the planes coming in to land when the plane flipped.

“[The pilot] was looking pretty much in control, dropping over the fence as they do to land on the grass runway.

“He was doing a beautiful job, nicely coming in for landing. It looks like he went to touch down and one wing went downwards, he tried to correct and it went the other way and the whole plane flipped over.”

The small crowd was “quite astonished”, he said. “It was windy but not windy-windy. It must have been a freak gust of wind that caught it from the side.”

The pair onboard had released their seatbelts and “slithered from the plane”, he said.

The plane, named Wichita Girl, was lightweigh­t which probably made it easy to flip — but also meant less damage, he said.

“It was probably quite terrifying to be in it but once it stopped it was pretty much over.”

Emergency services had arrived within minutes, he said.

A St John spokeswoma­n said the two people on board suffered minor injuries but did not need hospital treatment.

Fire and Emergency NZ central shift manager Murray Dunbar said the fire service had also attended but had left the airport by 12.20pm.

“The two people on board both walked away uninjured,” Dunbar said. There was no fire and the pair did not need to be freed from the plane.

At least one of the Stearman aircraft was privately owned and one was available for visitor rides, but it was not clear who the two people aboard were.

Airport authoritie­s and Civil Aviation staff were investigat­ing the incident, which was understood to have happened moments after the light aircraft touched down, possibly tipped by a gust.

MetService said southsouth­west winds had been mainly up to the high 20-knot range, with a peak gust of 31 knots later in the afternoon, about 2pm.

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 ?? Photo / Ian Cooper ?? The biplane was flipped on its back on one of the airport’s grass runways.
Photo / Ian Cooper The biplane was flipped on its back on one of the airport’s grass runways.

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