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Dream deflated: American ends quest to cross Atlan |
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| À§´×Æù ¸¸Á·µµ Ãßõ 1À§ ÀüÈ¿µ¾î Ȼ󿵾î | Dream deflated: American ends quest to cross Atlantic with helium balloons.
Jonathan Trappe, a fearless adventurer, has taken to the skies in a bid to become the first man to successfully cross the Atlantic Ocean in a balloon cluster. Trappe took off from Caribou, Maine, on Thursday morning, September 12, to begin a 2,500 mile journey across the Atlantic Ocean.
Just like in the Disney movie "Up," Trappe is using 370 giant balloons filled with helium. He holds on to one of the many balloons that will be used to carry him across the Atlantic.
Trappe says goodbye to Col. Joseph Kittinger and his team before he embarks on his transatlantic trip.
Trappe reaches incredible heights in his balloon cluster. It's not the first time he has crossed open seas. In May 2010 he became the first man to fly over the English Channel in a cluster balloon system. In 2011 he became the first person to fly over the Alps.
This latest challenge could take him up to six days to complete. Floating at altitudes between 18,000 to 25,000 feet, he will be relying on a team of meteorologists to guide and advise him on weather fronts.
Lift off! Trappe, in his specially crafted boat lift into the air amidst a heavy fog.
"Up" and away
Jonathan Trappe, the American who aimed to cross the Atlantic Ocean suspended from 370 helium-filled balloons, has aborted his mission just 12 hours and about 470 miles into the journey, his Facebook page says.
The 39-year-old IT project manager from Raleigh, North Carolina, was forced to make an early landing in a remote part of Newfoundland, Canada, because of a technical issue.
"Hmm, this doesn't look like France," Trappe posted to his Facebook page late Thursday, along with the coordinates of his landing.
Via his messaging system, Trappe spoke to Barcroft Media, a British company he partnered with. He said he feared he might die as he attempted to crash-land his balloon contraption.
Trappe reaches incredible heights in his balloon cluster. It's not the first time he has crossed open seas. In May 2010 he became the first man to fly over the English Channel in a cluster balloon system. In 2011 he became the first person to fly over the Alps.
This latest challenge could take him up to six days to complete. Floating at altitudes between 18,000 to 25,000 feet, he will be relying on a team of meteorologists to guide and advise him on weather fronts.
Lift off! Trappe, in his specially crafted boat lift into the air amidst a heavy fog.
"Up" and away
"Honestly did not know if I would survive that landing!" Trappe said of touching down in pitch darkness near Blow Me Down Provincial Park in the wilderness of Newfoundland.
He then messaged, "Situation stable. Have 60l water 38L. Gatorade 60,000 cal food. Have shelter and exposure gear."
Trappe said he would stay the night at his landing site before grabbing what gear he could -- including footage he took of the shorter-than-planned trip -- and making his way home.
Canadian teams have begun searching the forest where Trappe crash-landed. If the patrol is unsuccessful, Trappe, who has confirmed he is safe and well on Facebook, is prepared to spend another night in the mountainous region, which is populated by black bears and moose, said Sgt. Richard White of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
If the teams can't find him, or if he can't get a commercial team to extract him, he plans to make his way out of the mountainous forest on foot and head to a local community.
Fans followed the adventurer's movements on a website that showed his longitude and latitude along the journey via a satellite tracker he took with him.
Trappe took off from Caribou, Maine, early Thursday with 370 balloons.
"Nobody has ever made a flight like this, using only small helium balloons -- in manned flight -- across the ocean," Trappe wrote on his website, clusterballoon.com, after the style of ballooning used in his attempt to across the Atlantic.
In 2010, he was the first person to cross the English Channel using a balloon cluster.
Five people have died trying to cross the Atlantic with balloons. Trappe spent two years preparing for the transatlantic flight, and his trip to Europe was supposed to take about a week.
"While disappointing that he had to cut his quest across the Atlantic short, I know Jonathan thanks everyone for their support and encouragement," said Trappe's friend, Kevin Knapp, who monitored the trip from a command center on the ground.
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