Swiss adventurer Yves Rossy flies prior to ditching in the
sea while trying to fly from Morocco to Spain on
jet-powered wings. Rossy took off from Tangiers but halfway
through an expected 15-minute flight he went down into
wind-swept waters. (AP Photo/ Webtel. mobi)
A Swiss adventurer trying to soar from Morocco to Spain
on jet-powered wings ditched safely into the Atlantic today
after hitting turbulence and clouds so thick he could not tell
if he was flying up or down.
The bad weather - rather than a mechanical malfunction, as
reported earlier by the project's sponsors - thwarted Yves
Rossy's bid to become the first person to achieve such an
intercontinental crossing.
Rossy waved from the cold blue sea while awaiting rescue, his
red wing and striped parachute floating beside him. In time,
a rescuer helicopter winched him from the wind-swept waters
to safety.
"I am still here - a little bit wet but I am still here,"
told a news conference after undergoing a medical checkup,
still wearing his red and white flying suit. "I did my best,"
he said.
Rossy, a 50-year-old former fighter pilot, took off from
Tangiers but a few minutes into what was supposed to be a
15-minute flight he vanished from TV screens providing live
footage from planes and choppers accompanying him. For a good
10 minutes, no one knew where he was.
Rossy said that about three or four minutes into the flight
he hit turbulence and entered clouds that he described as
beautiful but disorienting because he could not see and had
no reference points.
He tried to climb over the cloud cover "but before the blue
came again" his flying became unstable. Eventually he found
himself wobbling and dropping at up to 300 kilometers per
hour until he was just 850 meters above the water. At that
rate he would have hit it in about 20 seconds.
"So the sea comes very fast," he said. "Unstable, at this
height, there is no playing anymore. So I throw away my wing
and opened my parachute." Rossy said he was disappointed but
will keep doing this kind of flight - he did the English
Channel last year - and plans to take on the Grand Canyon
next spring with an upgraded wing he is now completing.
"I love to fly and to fly like this is freedom," he said.
"The emotions are so strong you become addicted."
Things started off fine. As planned, Rossy stood on the ledge
of an open door on the small plane that took him into the
air, and jumped, deploying the wing and plummeting about 500
metres until he upped his thrust and gained flight at a
cruising speed of 220kph at an altitude was 1950m.
The wing has no steering mechanism. Rossy guides it by
shifting his weight.
He banked sharply left at first, and strong winds buffeted
him. At one point he flew through clouds and was lost from
sight. Below him, a ferry sailed from Morocco to Spain.
Stuart Sterzel, CEO of project sponsor Webtel.mobi, called
Rossy a hero just for trying, even though he did not make it
from Africa to Europe has planned.
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