Couple makes emergency landing on the property of fashion designer


KENT — Maureen Sidmore had seen worse landings in her 30 years as a flight attendant for American Airlines.

Not many of them, however, involved cutting out the engine or touching down in a tree-laced field.

Which is what happened last Sunday, June 24, when a single-engine aircraft carrying Sidmore, and piloted by her fiance, Richard Kourian, made an emergency landing in a hay field atop Skiff Mountain shortly before noon. The field is part of property owned by fashion designer Oscar de la Renta.

"Ricky did an unbelievable job [of landing the plane]," Sidmore said. "I’ve had bumpier landings on an Airbus."

The couple was returning from a wedding in Morristown, N.J., and heading home to Wolfeboro, N.H.

They were an hour into the flight when they heard a popping noise. Kourian suggested they turn around and land at the closest available airport but, after continued popping noises emanated from the engine block, he knew an emergency landing was the only option.

"I saw a field to the right and told Ricky," Sidmore recalled. "We made a few S-turns and turned the engine off. I said ‘God be with us.’ It happened so fast."

The aircraft stopped approximately 6 feet from what Sidmore described as a "big boulder."

"I consider us lucky," she said.

Upon landing, Kourian shut down the engine and the couple evacuated the plane.

A passer-by witnessed the landing and stopped to help the couple and call emergency personnel. The Kent Volunteer Fire Department responded within minutes, as did officers from the state police Troop L barracks in Litchfield.

Agents from the Federal Aviation Administration were also notified, and arrived two hours later.

According to Sidmore, a piston came loose from the engine column, punching a hole through the casing and damaging the cylinder.

Friends of the couple, also returning from the wedding, were able to give Sidmore and Kourian a ride home.

Kourian spent much of the day Monday at the field, where the plane was being disassembled and loaded onto a truck. The aircraft was brought to Rochester, N.H., for service.

De la Renta was unavailable for comment. His publicist said he has been out of the country and was not on the property at the time of the accident.

For all the danger associated with the landing, Sidmore remained remarkably calm.

"They took my blood pressure at the scene and it was 96 over 55," she said. "Ricky said I was amazing."

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