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Brazilian priest, amateur cluster balloonist, still missing Print E-mail
Written by Glen Moyer   
Friday, 25 April 2008 13:03
A Brazilian priest and amateur balloonist who was attempting to set a new world record went missing Sunday 4/20, and crews say they're continuing their search despite dwindling hope he will be found alive.

CBC News reports the Rev. Adelir Antonio di Carli took off Sunday from the southern city of Paranagua, riding below some 1,000 helium-filled party balloons. If that sounds familiar, it's because a man named Larry Walters -- aka "Lawn Chair Larry" -- attempted a similar feat in 1982, with a few others following suit in the years since.

The reverend intended to break the 19-hour record for human flight, using party balloons. He went missing eight hours after taking off on his journey; crews have since found his chair, but no sign of di Carli.

There are conflicting reports about di Carli's preparedness for his journey. The reverend took off wearing a helmet, waterproof clothes, and a thermal flight suit. He was also wearing a parachute, and planned to use a GPS unit to navigate.

"Given his physical condition and the equipment he was carrying, I would say there is an 80 percent chance that he is still alive," fire commander Johnny Coelho told Globo TV on Monday. The flight was di Carli's second, following a successful four-hour flight in January.

However, as more time has passed, rescuers are reportedly less-optimistic di Carli will be found alive. Also, Barbara Gancia, a reporter with Brazil's Folha de Sao Paolo newspaper, said di Carli may not have been as well-prepared as earlier thought.

"What we're hearing now is that he did not know how to use his equipment, the GPS, and he was ill-prepared for his flight," she said Wednesday, adding winds forced di Carli out to sea, despite his intent to travel inland.

Gancia also says a former flight instructor of di Carli's was highly critical of his plan to go for the record. "He called him undisciplined and an exhibitionist, and he was always bragging about his faith and how his faith was going to carry him and take him safely through his journey," she claims. "And that's not what happened."

courtesy www.aero-news.net 

 Note: Reports from Fox News say searchers found two sets of cluster balloons floating in the ocean near the last point of contact with di Carli but there was no sign of the priest.

Last Updated on Friday, 25 April 2008 13:11
 
Fossett Declared Officially Dead Print E-mail
Written by Glen Moyer   
Friday, 15 February 2008 17:00

Feb. 15, 2008

Millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett was declared legally dead by a Chicago Circuit Court on Friday, Feb. 15, 5 months after he disappeared while piloting a private plane in Nevada. Fossett's wife Peggy had petitioned the court for the declaration in order to clear legal issues involving his estate. The judge heard testimony from Peggy Fossett, a family friend and a search and rescue expert before finding there was sufficient evidence to make the declaration.

As part of her testimony Peggy Fossett said Steve had been on a pleasure flight when he disappeared and not, as first reported, searching for dry lake beds for an upcoming land speed record attempt. Steve Fossett was 63.

 

 

 

Feb. 8, 2008 

Steve Fossett Dead at 63 

James Stephen Fossett, dead at 63? The world famous adventurer who set more than 100 world records has not been seen since he left the Nevada ranch of friend Barron Hilton on September 3rd on a short flight to spot potential dry lake beds to be used in his next record attempt - a new land speed record. On Monday, November 26th, his wife Peggy petitioned a court in Chicago as the first step in declaring him legally dead saying, "after three months we must accept that Steve did not survive."

Born in Tennessee and raised in California, Fossett developed a lifelong love of mountain climbing but it was on the sea and in the air where his quest for adventure would eventually lead him. Among his world records are five circumnavigations of the globe both on the sea and in the air. One of his earliest accomplishments, and one that he was equally proud of right along with those world records, was his achievement of earning the rank of Eagle Scout in the Boy Scouts of America.

Fossett was best known in the ballooning world for having made the first solo flight around the world by balloon. He succeeded only after several earlier disappointments, one of which nearly cost him his life when thunderstorms forced him to crash in the Pacific Ocean.

Fossett had retired in 1990 after a career as a commodities broker where he made, lost and re-made his fortunes. In an interview with BALLOONING Editor Glen Moyer in November 2006 Fossett acknowledged that his solo flight around the world in a balloon was the one world record and accomplishment that he was most proud of.

James Stephen Fossett, born April 22, 1944, died on or after September 3, 2007.

 

 

Oct 23, 2008

Fossett will not be next Amerlia Earhart 

Despite the most intensive search effort in US aviation history, millionaire adventurer Steve Fossett and his Decathlon remain missing in northern Nevada... and his friend Sir Richard Branson is afraid the aviator might be lost "forever."

But analysis of previous aircraft search efforts showed that Fossett is not likely to become the next Amelia Earhart, the aviatrix who vanished over the Pacific Ocean in 1937 and was never found. Research by the Reno Gazette-Journal revealed only three other planes that have disappeared in the area since 1949 remain undiscovered.

Fossett vanished on what was to be a short flight out of the Flying M Ranch near Yerington, NV on September 3, as reported by ANN.

Nevada's rugged terrain has been the site of many crashes and scores of searches since the 1950s, but most aircraft were eventually found accidentally by hunters, hikers, or ranchers, in some cases years later.

Most remained missing less than one year, research by the Reno paper found.

"In a year or two, some hunter or hiker will stumble across something in the ground and kick it, and it will be a piece of his plane," said Maj. Cindy Ryan of the Nevada Wing of the Civil Air Patrol. "That's very common. That's the way I figure this will end."

The search for Fossett by aircraft and ground teams covered 20,000 square miles of rugged terrain, and was the largest in the history of the Civil Air Patrol.

CAP had 27 aircraft participating, in addition to 10 helicopters and many private fixed-wing aircraft that flew out of Barron Hilton's Flying M Ranch, the Nevada National Guard also had aircraft involved.

The search generated 7,500 calls to CAP headquarters from media and other interested parties, according to Ryan.

The Guard's aircraft cost came to just more than $1 million, she said, with the state picking up 75 percent of the tab and the rest paid out of federal training funds previously allocated to the Nevada Guard.

Google Earth, and high-tech imagery equipment and satellite photos were used in the effort, which turned up no trace of Fossett's plane, owned by Hilton.

"I'm disappointed we didn't find him," Ryan said. "It wasn't for lack of resources or trying."

"There's been a lot of hype and misinformation that even the search officials (were) passing on that Nevada and the West is a Bermuda Triangle for missing aircraft," said John Lopez Jr. of Washington, a retired Army major who has become an aviation historian. "That's not the case."

A review of newspaper archives by the Gazette-Journal last month showed 15 to 20 missing aircraft searches for which no resolution could be immediately found. But further research by the newspaper and Lopez narrowed that number to three planes that have vanished without a trace.

One aircraft has been missing for 18 years, and two others for more than 40 years

 

REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM WWW.AERO-NEWS.NET 

 

 

October 18, 2008

Fossett Search Turns from rescue to recovery 

 There is still no sign of missing millionaire aviator/adventurer Steve Fossett despite an intense 2-week manhunt that has covered tens of thousands of acres of Nevada. Fossett has been missing since September 3rd when he failed to return from a flight during which he hoped to scout dry lake bed sites suitable for his next world record attempt - a run at the world land speed record.

On Tuesday, September 18 the Civial Air Patrol announced it was scaling back the search which at one time had almost half a hundred aircraft in the skies. CAP officials said that in every search there comes a point of diminishing returns. Two aircraft will remain in the search area but the massive manhunt will not continue unless there is some new lead developed. Oddly the search did turn up 7 previously unknown crash sites but not a single sign of Fossett. 

Rescuers were orginially in high spirits and often cited Fossett's numerous world record experiences and his natural outdoor experience with hiking, mountaineering and survival as odds working in his favor. As the search has continued with no results that optimisim has waned and the reality that Fossett may be lost forever cannot be denied.

 


Steve Fossett Missing: Search Continues 

The search continues for missing adventurer Steve Fossett... and while there's little new information regarding the search, we are learning more about why the record-holding pilot was out flying Monday.The Associated Press reports Fossett took off from the Flying M Ranch Monday morning, to scout out dry lakebeds for his next record-attempt -- this one on land. Fossett was seeking places for an upcoming attempt to break the land speed record in a jet-powered car, said Paul Charles, a spokesman for Sir Richard Branson. There are reports Fossett may have been scouting locations near restricted airspace... which could mean Fossett's flight path may have been tracked, if only briefly, by military radar... potentially giving some clue as to where Fossett's plane may have disappeared. Fossett departed the private airfield Monday with approximately five hours of fuel onboard -- near the maximum for a Bellanca Super Decathlon.

Original Reports

1545 EDT: Civil Air Patrol officials tell CNN they're continuing the search for the Bellanca Super Decathlon piloted by billionaire adventurer Steve Fossett, that went missing shortly after takeoff from a private airstrip in Western Nevada Monday morning. CAP identified the plane as N240R, an 8KCAB-180 registered to the Flying M Hunting Club in Yerington, NV.

Fossett departed from the Flying M Ranch, about 30 miles south of Yerington, just before 0900 PDT Monday. Earlier reports stated Fossett took off Monday evening. The Decathlon is an aerobatic-capable aircraft, though Fossett -- who reportedly dislikes performing aerobatic maneuvers -- is not believed to have planned such maneuvers on his flight. He was not wearing a parachute, a requirement only when flying aerobatics with more than one person onboard. CAP crews have not detected a signal from the plane's ELT.

Original Report

We have but the sketchiest of details to go on right now, but ANN has learned that a search is on for world-record holding pilot and adventurer, Steve Fossett. Fossett was reported as having departed Nevada's Hilton Ranch airport in a blue and white Super Decathlon, Monday night, and has not been seen since. Fossettt, 63, is now the subject of a growing CAP Search. Civil Air Patrol spokesperson, Maj. Cynthia S. Ryan said that three crews are in the air looking for Fossett’s blue and white aircraft and that more are on the way.

“We will be launching more shortly,” she said.

Local reports indicate the search area is a tough one... covering "hundreds of square miles of rugged terrain." CAP is currently canvassing local airports in the event that he had to put down there, but so far, no reports indicate any sightings.

Fossett is no stranger to the Nevada area. Less than two months ago, Fossett launched himself into the history books yet again... as he and fellow Glider Pilot Terry Delore added to their long list of successes by flying a 777 mile triangular course in Nevada in 8 hours and 23 minutes at a new world record average speed of 92.73 mph. This allowed Fossett and Delore to break one of the oldest world gliding records in the book -- "the last of the major glider records" set two decades ago by the legendary Hans Werner Grosse of Germany.

 Fossett's web site noted that Grosse dominated glider world records for many years -- and at age 85 continues to fly high performance gliders. Grosse's 1250 kilometer record of 89.14 mph was flown from Alice Springs in the Australian outback on January 10, 1987.


Bio Information

Steve Fossett is probably one of the world's greatest record-breaking adventurers. He holds 116 records in five different sports, including balloons, jet airplanes and gliders, including records for US Transcontinental, Australia Transcontinental, and the fastest flight in a non-supersonic airplane at 742.02 mph, not to mention numerous world speed sailing records. Flying with co-pilot Terry Delore, Fossett set nine of the 21 Glider Open records.

Among Fossett's most notable achievements are the successful completion of a solo balloon trip around the world in July 2002 in the "Bud Light Spirit of Freedom." Fossett also set an Absolute Round the World Speed Record, a new record for the Fastest Speed by a Manned Balloon and a new 24 Hour Balloon Distance Record.

Fossett also became the first solo aircraft pilot to circumnavigate the globe without refueling in March 2005, in his Virgin Atlantic Global Flyer. Fossett completed that trip in 66 hours.

Fossett was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame (NAHF) at the 46th annual ceremony in July.

He was born on April 22, 1944 in California. In 1966, he earned a BA from Stanford University and an MBA from Washington University in 1968.

FMI: http://www.stevefossett.com/

 

courtesy www.aero-news.net 

Last Updated on Friday, 15 February 2008 18:05
 
Register Online for St. Jean sur Richelieu / Win $500 Print E-mail
Written by Glen Moyer   
Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:14
2008 Marks the 25th Anniversary of the International Balloon Festival of Saint Jean sur Richelieu, the largest balloon event in Canada. As an added incentive to attract pilots this year, those who register online BEFORE March 1, 2008 will be entered into a drawing for a $500 cash prize. The drawing will take place on the final night of the event that runs August 9-17th. The prize is $500 Canadian. The URL for registrations is http://www.montgolfieres.com/en/montgolfieres/pilotes.asp .
Last Updated on Saturday, 19 January 2008 17:16
 
Last Minute Stocking Stuffer or Year End Tax Deduction! Print E-mail
Written by Glen Moyer   
Saturday, 22 December 2007 06:53
Have you always wanted to see your name up in lights? Always wanted to be in the movies? Do you need a last minute gift for the balloonist who has everything? Looking for a unique way to honor the memory of a lost ballooning friend? Need a year-end tax deduction?

The answer to all of the above just might be found in a movie project called "Through the Air to Calais or The Wonderful Cruise of Blanchard's Balloon." The film tells the story of the first balloon flight over the English Channel in the winter of 1785. Undertaken by a team of young filmmakers for their thesis work at the prestigious American Film Institute, the screenplay and film project has already been called "the most ambitious and potentially best Thesis Film ever made."

Of course it takes money to make movies and a thesis project like this one is no different. The filmmakers have already won two grants totaling $37,000, but $28,000 remains to be raised to meet the budget of $65,000. For this, producer Seth Kamphujis is asking for your help. A donation of as little as $50 will earn you a listing in the movie's credits as a "Friend" of the film. Donations of greater amounts are of course welcomed and provide commensurate levels of exposure and thanks. ALL donations are tax deductible through the American Film Institute.

Kamphujis tells bfa.net it is hoped the film will complete production in June. Plans are being discussed that include a red carpet gala premier in Albuquerque and subsequent screenings during the 2008 Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta. The film will also be shown in numerous film festivals world wide and a copy will also reside in the collection of the Anderson Abruzzo Balloon Museum in Albuquerque.

To learn more about the film, the production team and to make a donation, log on to  www.theballoonmovie.com. Please don't delay, a limited amount of time remains for the team to raise the needed funds.
Last Updated on Saturday, 22 December 2007 12:01
 
Back to Back Champions at Fiesta! Print E-mail
Written by Glen Moyer   
Sunday, 14 October 2007 16:37

The 36th Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta wrapped on Sunday, October 14th after a full 9 days of flying. Only two events - evening balloon glows - fell victim to high winds despite forecasts from opening day to the end that were among the gloomiest ever issued! The closing weekend proved to be two of the best mass ascensions ever and the Night Magic Glow on the final Saturday night was also best of show.

In the 12th America's Challenge Gas Balloon Race Andy Cayton (with co-pilot Stuart Enloe) won the event for the second consecutive year. The two were airborne for 61.5 hours and covered  1,055+ miles landing in Canada. Second were Barbara Fricke and Peter Cuneo, 47.75 hours and 475+ miles, while third place went to Austrians Stuerzlinger and Meierhofer at 46.28 hours and 437+ miles.

 In the Fiesta's hot air competition Steve Lombardi of Texas also claimed his second win in a row. Joe Heartsill of Texas was 2nd and Jeff Gilles of New Mexico was 3rd. Lombardi and Heartsill won new Honda motorcycles while Gilles won a Honda ATV. David Bobel of Indiana claimed a Honda Ridgeline truck in the key Grab competition. $17,000 in cash was won by 8 pilots in two days of cash-grabs while Buzz Biernacki of New Mexico won a Swiss watch valued at $8.000.

 The event was marred by tragedy on Monday when a 60-year old woman from California fell to her death after the balloon she was riding in struck a static wire. Two others were inured in the accident. The next day several others received injuries when freak high winds drove a handful of balloons into the ground. The fatality was the first in almost 15 years at Fiesta.

Last Updated on Sunday, 12 April 2009 14:59
 
On Target features World Champion John Petrehn Print E-mail
Written by Glen Moyer   
Tuesday, 19 June 2007 04:33
Current World Champion Hot Air Balloon Pilot John Petrehn is the guest on the June edition of On Target. Petrehn talks with BFA Editor Glen Moyer about winning the championship, what fuels his competitive drive and his hopes for the future. The June 2007 On Target podcast is online now. Program time: 20 minutes.
 
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