American daredevil and engineer Jonathan Trappe took a series of stunning images as he flew a cluster of balloons 18,000 feet above Mexico. He completed his latest stunt to celebrate the Mexican bicentennial of the beginning of the Independence movement, and the centennial of the Mexican revolution.
American daredevil and engineer Jonathan Trappe took a
series of stunning images as he flew a cluster of balloons 18,000 feet above
Mexico. He completed his latest stunt to
celebrate the Mexican bicentennial of the beginning of the Independence
movement, and the centennial of the Mexican revolution. The adventure was
widely followed by the media and people of Mexico alike, who celebrated in his
unusual triumph.
He took off in the craft, made up of extra strong party
balloons decorated in colours of the Mexican flag, green, white and red, from
the Festival International Del Globo 2010 in Leon Mexico in November 2010.
The Festival International Del Globo is a huge international
balloon festival held in Mexico every year.
It is the biggest balloon festival in Latin America, and said to be the
second biggest of its genre in the world.
Mr. Trappe certainly had a large live audience for his
departure, the festival attracts balloonists from as far as the USA, Costa
Rica, Argentina, Venezuela , France, Germany, Holland and Belgium. It attracts 200 balloons, including 20 figure
balloons of varying designs, but none quite as visually unusual as the office
chair attached to a cluster of balloons that Mr. Trappe was piloting.
Jonathan, an American engineer from South Carolina has been
obsessed with cluster balloon flights for many years after conversing with a
colleague about a failed attempt he had heard about, to fly a balloon across
Lake Eire in North America. This ignited
a curiosity that lead to a passion.
He researched, designed and manufactured the cluster balloon
contraption himself, and made his first test flight in the Nevada desert
several years ago. Trappe had ensured
that his first plan was to get his regular balloon piloting license. As an engineer, he is extremely diligent
about health and safety, and keeps clear and thorough contact with air traffic
control in whichever area he decides to fly.
This is because although he is not flying an aircraft, his cluster
balloon device is capable of reaching heights that could interfere with
aircraft.
The adventurer, made history by floating over the English
Channel dangling from balloons in May 2010, a world record in distance
travelled by cluster balloons, and a route never attempted before.
Mr. Trappe, 37, controlled his altitude by releasing air in
his durable high performance balloons, reaching speeds of 18-50 mph.
Jonathan and his ten ground support crew travelled an
astonishing 100 miles from the festival in Leon to Colorado in Mexico’s South,
where he descended.
He captured some stunning images from a balloon-mounted
camera as he made the journey, some of which are now part of an internationally
renowned exhibition.
Dressed in protective sunglasses and a pair of
denim jeans, Trappe called the journey 'outstanding' and said he was
'wonderfully inspired' by his trip. As
were many of his supporters, and the Mexican public and media, where he was
almost hailed a hero.
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