Captain Jason Vance had flown through storms, turbulence, mechanical failures, and sleepless overnight routes during his twenty-two years as a commercial pilot, yet nothing in his career prepared him for what happened over the gray northern waters that morning. The flight had begun like hundreds before it—routine weather checks, calm passengers settling into their seats, flight attendants serving coffee while soft engine vibrations hummed steadily through the cabin. From the cockpit windows, the sky looked unusually peaceful, layered with pale clouds stretching endlessly over the lake below.
Jason remembered thinking how forgettable the trip would probably be. Air traffic control had reported no storms, no major turbulence, and no unusual bird activity beyond a few scattered flocks migrating across the region. But barely forty minutes into the flight, the calm atmosphere shattered. First came a blur of movement ahead of the aircraft, dark shapes multiplying rapidly against the windshield. Then came the sound—violent impacts hammering the fuselage like heavy hailstones fired from cannons. Birds slammed into the nose, wings, and cockpit windows with horrifying force. Feathers exploded across the glass, smearing visibility as the entire aircraft trembled under the assault. Passengers screamed from the cabin while warning alarms erupted throughout the cockpit.