A United Airlines passenger who tried to take her “emotional support peacock” with her on a flight from Newark to Los Angeles was
turned away by the airline because of health and safety concerns.
A female traveller was recently banned from taking a large "emotional-support peacock" on board a United Airlines flight, it has emerged.
She had offered to buy the bird its own plane ticket, according to travel blog Live and Let Fly.
Nonetheless the airline refused to let the bird board at Newark airport in New Jersey, saying it did not meet guidelines due to its weight and size.
United says this was explained to the traveller before she arrived at Newark.
Pictures of the striking bird and its owner, attempting to travel to Los Angeles, emerged via The Jet Set, a travel-based talk show.
The images show the animal perched on an airport baggage trolley, as fellow passengers gaze at it in shock.
After six hours at the airport, the exotic bird and its human companions decided to take to the road and instead drive across the US.
It's pretty funny a bizarre sort of way, but it's also made me wonder if stunts like this make it harder for people who have genuine support animals to be taken seriously - I don't think the peacock really is a support animal, he belongs to an artist who originally got him for an art installation.
The peacock, reportedly called Dexter, belongs to Brooklyn-based artist Ventiko, who documents its life on social media.
"I have never left the house without having at least one person react," Ventiko told a local culture website in 2017.
The artist, whose real name is not known, told Bedford and Bowery that the feathery giant "really changed my life in a positive way".
She originally bought Dexter and a peahen called Etta for an art installation. She later found them a new home from which Etta and her offspring disappeared.
The loss affected Dexter's behaviour and Ventiko came to his rescue after hearing that the bird was housed in a garage. Following a failed stint at an upstate New York farm, Ventiko finally decided to welcome Dexter into her Bushwick loft.
Now involved in her photography and performance art, the exotic bird appears to enjoy his New York life.
However, he avoids public transportation, like the subway, because Ventiko doesn't "want to traumatise him".
Airlines have allowed some passengers with emotional or psychiatric problems to take therapy animals on board with them.
But the number of emotional support animals has been rising in recent years, sparking suggestions that people are abusing the system.
In 2014, a woman was escorted off a US Airways flight when her pig, named Hobie, defecated and squealed before the plane took off.