

Video above: Time lapse of Brood X cicada emerging It's a flight delay 17 years in the making.The White House press charter plane scheduled to leave Washington on Tuesday evening ahead of Joe Biden's first trip abroad as president was delayed by cicadas, the noisy insects that have emerged after their nearly two decades of slumber.The chartered plane was scheduled to depart around 9 p.m., but a new plane had to be dispatched to Dulles International Airport after airline officials informed White House travel aides that cicadas had invaded exterior sections of the plane late Tuesday afternoon.The flight left early Wednesday morning, more than six and a half hours behind schedule.Biden departed for England on Wednesday morning aboard Air Force One — an aircraft that presumably has better protection from the East Coast cicada invasion.The loud, cacophonous bugs first emerged from the ground in May on the East Coast as part of Brood X, which comes out every 17 years, according to the National Park Service.To some, the brood's emergence is an awe-inspiring experience, worthy of glossy cicada photo shoots and endless media profiles. To others, cicadas can be a creepy, inescapable nuisance.This round of cicadas will be dying off in late June and early July, so we can look forward to the next time they come, in 2038.
Video above: Time lapse of Brood X cicada emerging
It's a flight delay 17 years in the making.
The White House press charter plane scheduled to leave Washington on Tuesday evening ahead of Joe Biden's first trip abroad as president was delayed by cicadas, the noisy insects that have emerged after their nearly two decades of slumber.
The chartered plane was scheduled to depart around 9 p.m., but a new plane had to be dispatched to Dulles International Airport after airline officials informed White House travel aides that cicadas had invaded exterior sections of the plane late Tuesday afternoon.
The flight left early Wednesday morning, more than six and a half hours behind schedule.
Biden departed for England on Wednesday morning aboard Air Force One — an aircraft that presumably has better protection from the East Coast cicada invasion.
The loud, cacophonous bugs first emerged from the ground in May on the East Coast as part of Brood X, which comes out every 17 years, according to the National Park Service.
To some, the brood's emergence is an awe-inspiring experience, worthy of glossy cicada photo shoots and endless media profiles. To others, cicadas can be a creepy, inescapable nuisance.
This round of cicadas will be dying off in late June and early July, so we can look forward to the next time they come, in 2038.
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