Pilot makes emergency landing on river island
A pilot landed his stricken plane on a small uninhabited island in the River Tay.
He made the emergency landing on Mugdrum after suffering engine problems on his Cessna light aircraft.
Lifeboat crews raced to the islandnearnewburghandrescued the stranded pilot, who was understood to be the sole occupant.
The unnamed pilot set off from Perth Airport minutes earlier but reported difficulties with the plane’s engine not long after take-off.
A fellow pilot posted on an online forum: “Well done to that man who took off before me from Perth this morning making for Fife, finding the only wee grazing field on tiny Mugdrum Island in the Tay to make a dead stick landing.”
An operational co-ordinator at Perth Airport confirmed the Cessna had taken off from there and said teams were in contact with the pilot.
“We are aware of the incident as the plane took off from here and we got word it had engine problems,” he said.
“It was a Cessna aircraft. We are providing support to the man involved.”
He added that the plane was not based at Perth Airport.
A spokesperson for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) said: “At 11:31am on Saturday, the Broughty Ferry RNLI were called into action following a report that a light aircraft had performed a forced landing on Mugdrum
0 The Cessna plane at its landing spot on Mugdrum Island Island, River Tay, after experiencing mechanical problems.
“RNLI volunteer lifeboat and shore crews launched the inshore lifeboat within eight minutes of receiving the call. On arrival at Mugdrum Island at12:25pm,thevolunteercrew found the pilot of a light aircraft uninjured and well, but stranded on the island.
“The crew assisted the pilot on to the lifeboat before transporting him to Newburgh where he disembarked.”
Fife SNP councillor David Macdiarmid, who represents the Howe and Tay Coast ward, praised the pilot for averting a potential catastrophe.
“The man must be happy today as it is only by using his brilliant skills that he is alive,” he said.
“Mugdrum Island is said to be the biggest in the River Tay but it wouldn’t look that big if you were going to have land a plane there.
“It’s absolutely wonderful that he managed to land – heaven knows what he must have been thinking when his engine suffered problems.
“If the plane’s engine cut out the pilot must have had to glide on to the island. You don’t want to think what might have happened if he had come down in the River Tay – it may have been a totally different outcome.”