“Meow, meow.., woof, woof.” These aren’t the sounds you hear commonly when you are 30,000 feet above the ground, or in an Air Traffic Control Tower.
One might wonder if there was a pet on board, right? But no. The animal sounds in question were heard on a frequency meant strictly for emergencies, and that’s exactly what air traffic controllers at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport picked up on April 12. The same airport had been site of a deadly mid-air collision between a commercial jet and a US Army helicopter last year.
In a bizarre exchange, pilots were heard making animal noises mid-air, including meowing and barking, over an air traffic “guarded” radio channel typically reserved for urgent or distress communications.
The frequency in question is meant to be used only when something goes seriously wrong, and the flight needs immediate coordination mid-air, and not for banter and jokes to relieve mid-shift boredom.
“It’s not entertainment, it’s a serious frequency, and it has a serious purpose,” Dennis Tajer, a spokesperson for the Allied Pilots Association, was quoted as saying by ABC News.
Regulations prohibit pilots from “engaging in non-essential conversations when they’re below 10,000 feet altitude,” US media outlet, AOL, quoted the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) as saying.
FAA investigates all situations where pilots may have violated the rules. The agency added that the audio of the meowing comes from a third-party source but will be investigated once they have verified it.
The chatter, which was recorded and later obtained from ATC recordings, captures the unusual exchange lasting several minutes, which wasn’t just a one-off slip.
Even after an air traffic controller stepped in and told pilots to maintain professionalism, the response was in the form of rage bait, with the pilots keeping up their meowing and barking.
“This is why you still fly an RJ,” the air traffic controller retorted, referring to regional jets typically flown by early-career pilots.
Great advice for aspiring pilots, we must say, that making animal sounds will not get you particularly high up the career ladder.
What makes the incident more than just an odd aviation moment is where it happened. The same airspace around Reagan National Airport witnessed a deadly mid-air collision in 2025 that killed 67 people after a US Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines regional jet collided mid-air, raising serious concerns about air safety and communication lapses.
Against that backdrop, casual and non-essential chatter, especially on an emergency channel, begins to feel like the system itself is being made a joke of.
At a time when the US is facing a shortage of ATCs, many of whom are already overworked, there is little room for this kind of distraction. These are professionals managing crowded skies, not audiences for mid-air jokes. A “meow” or “woof” on an emergency channel adds unnecessary noise to a system that cannot afford it.


