Showing posts with label Around the World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Around the World. Show all posts

July 22 - Firsts Around the World. Literally

    Posted on July 22, 2022     


This is an update of my post published on July 22, 2011:



On this day in 1933, Wiley Post became the first person to fly solo around the world.

On this day in 1983, Dick Smith became the first person to fly a helicopter solo around the world.

And on this day in 1989, Tony Aliengena, age 11, became the youngest pilot to fly around the world.


Wiley Post's around-the-world flight took just 7 days and 19 hours, beating his own world's record for speed around the world (which previous feat he accomplished with a navigator on board). Post stopped three times for repairs to his autopilot, once to replace his airscrew, and three more stops, presumably for refueling and rest and refreshment!

When Post arrived at the airfield in New York that he had left a week before, he was greeted by a crowd of fifty thousand cheering people!


Dick Smith, an Australian entrepreneur, took his time making his solo round-the world flight, but in so doing managed to honor the early aviation pioneers. Smith took off from an airfield in Texas in August of 1982, and his journey across the Atlantic ended on the 50th anniversary of James Mollison's solo crossing of the same ocean. Once he arrived in his native Australia, Smith took more than half a year off. When he resumed his journey, he deliberately timed his arrival back in Texas to be the 50th anniversary of Wiley Post's solo feat.

Dick Smith is one of those guys who has the desire and the means to do grand round-the-world gestures. He has also flown around the world “vertically,” stopping off at both the North and South Poles, and a few years ago he and his wife completed a two-and-a-half-year drive around the world via wheeled vehicle. I assume the car spent some time on ferry boats?



Tony Aliengena's round-the-world flight began and ended very near me, at John Wayne Airport, Orange County, California. It took seven weeks. When at a stopping place in Alaska, just a few days before the ending of the trip, Aliengena's father took the controls of the small plane and loaded too many people into the plane to go somewhere for a fishing trip. He flipped the plane and crashed it! So then Mr. Aliengena had to go find another plane so his son could continue the world-record feat.

It looks to me like this particular round-the-world adventure was being pushed on the fourth grader by his publicity-seeking dad. Apparently the FAA no longer allows youngest pilot feats—which means Tony Aliengena's world record may stand for a long time!













July 21 - First Solo Human-Powered Circumnavigation! What???

Posted on July 21, 2020

On this date in 2012, Turkish American adventurer Erden Eruç completed the first solo human-powered circumnavigation of the Earth.

The first person to do something is often celebrated! But there were a lot of words there explaining just what Eruç was first at! Let's break it down...



To circumnavigate the Earth means to go all the way around it. This is something that many of us have never done - and most of us have never wanted to do! The first people to circumnavigate our planet, as far as we know, were the remainders of an expedition originally led by Ferdinand Magellan who ended up where they started from in 1522. (Magellan himself didn't make it the whole way 'round!)

The first solo circumnavigation means, of course, going all the way around the world all by your lonesome! 

The first person known to have accomplished this derring-do is Joshua Slocum, who finished his trip in 1898.

In 2007 Jason Lewis completed the first human-powered circumnavigation. He did everything from pedaling wooden pedal boats across entire oceans to kayaking, roller blading to bicycling, and of course sometimes hiking - and with all those ways of traveling without horse- or steam- or gas-powered vehicles, he managed to circle the entire globe. 


But Lewis didn't do that massive feat alone. He had a traveling buddy during some of the ocean crossings and other companions during, say, the hike across the Big Island of Hawaii and the bicycle crossing of Australia. 


Perhaps Lewis inspired Erden Eruç to try a solo human-powered globe-trot? Who knows - but he rowed across several oceans, paddled a sea kayak and several canoes, biked, hiked, skied - and managed to circle the entire planet in just a little more than five years!

Wow!



Eruç is still adventuring. He has set a goal of climbing the tallest mountains on six continents, and he has already conquered Denali (North America), Mount Kosciuszko (Australia), and Mount Kilimanjaro (Africa). Three down; three to go!

In 2003, Eruç's went to Alaska to climb Dinali, but first
he took a little time off to get married! His wife is also
a fan of adventuring!





July 14 - First and Fastest on the Fourteenth!

Posted on July 14, 2019

There are so many world records and so many "firsts" accomplished around the world, probably every single day, that I could probably write a story called "First and Fastest" every day.

Today's story is about human flight:



On this date in 1911, an exhibition pilot landed a plane on the White House lawn. This was less than eight years after the first brief flight performed by the Wright Brothers - and already one of their exhibition pilots, Henry Atwood, was dazzling top D.C. officials!

Later, President Taft awarded Atwood with a Gold Medal.



Flash forward more than half a century...

On this date in 1938, pilot and businessman Howard Hughes set a new world record - by flying around the world in just 91 hours! This beat the old record by - get this! - almost four days!!

Even though Hughes had already become rich and successful in business, including in "show biz" (he was a movie producer)...

Even though Hughes was known among many Hollywood fans because he had dated actors like Katharine Hepburn and Ginger Rogers...

It was this world record that made Hughes really famous, and New York City even threw him a ticker-tape parade.

In case you're wondering, Hughes flew around the world with a Lockheed 14 Super Electra twin-engine plane and a crew of four: in addition to his own role as pilot, Hughes included on this record-breaking flight a co-pilot, a navigator, an engineer, and a mechanic. There was also a man on the ground who worked as a flight operations manager. Hughes' plane was the latest in 1938 aeronautics technology, including a top-notch radio and navigation equipment


Hughes' voyage included legs from New York City to
Paris (France); Moscow, Omsk, and Yakutsk (Russia); Fairbanks (Alaska),
Minneapolis (Minnesota), and then back to NYC.