“Nerve wear, terrible and terrifying.”
This is what a witness described her experience from American Airlines, which was forced to catch fire after an emergency landing in Colorado.
After landing in Denver, some of the 172 passengers heading to Dallas were standing on the wings of the plane, with plenty of smoke around them.
Everyone on board, including six crew members, was driven out of the plane alive and received 12 passengers with minor injuries at the hospital, according to airport officials.
One of the passengers, Michele Woods, told CBS News, the U.S. partner of the BBC, that everything about the flight seemed to be what it seemed to be when it took off.
It wasn’t until they were cruising in the air that she noticed a loud noise echoing on one of the plane’s engines.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) then confirmed around 17:15 local time (23:15 GMT) that the crew reported “engine vibration.”
But even if the plane landed, passengers quickly realized that they were still away from safety.
“Everything was good, but then there was smoke filling the cabin,” Ms. Woods said.
She sat in front of the plane and explained that she was one of the few positions that once landed, they could walk off the plane.
Other passengers, AS Virus Images Now The messy man standing on the wings of the smoking plane exhibition did not escape directly.
Ingrid Hibbit, who traveled on Flight 1006 with her husband and daughter, was one of the unfortunate few who were forced to sail to the wing before she could rebuild on the ground with her family.
“The flames of windows and windows are a kind of melting,” Ms Hibbit told CBS. The fact that unloading from the plane proved to be a difficult task – she noted that wearing Birkenstock sandals didn’t help.
She admitted: “I’m like shaking, I’m unstable.”
Apart from the anxiety she already had fever, she and any members of her family were not sitting in the same part of the plane. They can only communicate through text messages.
“I hope everything is OK, but we are really not sure,” she said, adding that despite the 10 minutes of suffering, “it’s a very long 10 minutes.”
“It’s a great feeling to see everyone doing well.”
She and her family finally landed on Friday morning at the Fort Worth International Airport in Dallas, along with several other passengers.
She said, relieved swept the group, especially after covering up the “tired” episode that began the family holiday.
“If it was going to happen in the air, I don’t think we would tell the story at all because who knows what that would be like,” she said. “I’m grateful that everyone survived.”