Teen Small Solo

Teen Small Solo




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Teen Small Solo
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BRUSSELS ( NewsNation Now ) — A 19-year-old pilot who set a world record as the youngest woman to fly solo around the world says the journey taught her that she is capable for doing more than she thinks — knowledge she says applies to everyone.
“When you’re forced out of the comfort zone, you kind of have to improvise,” Belgian-British pilot Zara Rutherford said on “NewsNation Prime.” “You have to deal with all these things. And then realizing that I could be a much more confident person.”
Rutherford landed in western Belgium on Thursday — 155 days after she departed.
In her trek of more than 28,000 nautical miles, she stopped over in five continents and visited 41 nations.
“I always dreamt of flying around the world, but I never thought it’d be possible,” Rutherford said. “So I kind of never really thought much about it. Because I always assumed it’d be too expensive, too dangerous, too complicated.”
With a one-year break before college, she decided to go for it.
“I’m doing this 100%,” Rutherford said. “I’m going to put my all into it. I’m going to find sponsorship, whatever happens, I’m going to make it work. And thankfully had my parents, like, supporting me throughout and saying, you know, ‘Zara we are 100% behind this.'”
Rutherford’s flight saw her steer clear of wildfires in California, deal with biting cold over Russia and narrowly avoid North Korean airspace. She flew by Visual Flight Rules, basically going on sight only, often slowing down progress when more sophisticated systems could have led her through clouds and fog.
She said one of the highlights of the trip was was flying over a volcano in Iceland. 
“Seeing the crater and seeing the lava bubbling up and then, like, flowing down was incredible,” Rutherford said.
Sometimes she feared for her life, and at other times she simply yearned for the simple comforts of home. Flying runs in her blood since both her parents are pilots and she has been traveling in small planes since she was 6. At 14, she started flying herself.
Rutherford said her next goal is to finish college, She is considering an degree in engineering.
After that, she wants to go even higher.
“A dream of mine is to become an astronaut. That’d be the ultimate challenge,” Rutherford said.
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U.S. | Teenage Aviator Circles the Globe Solo, Setting a Record
Teenage Aviator Circles the Globe Solo, Setting a Record
Mack Rutherford, 17, landed in Sofia, Bulgaria, on Wednesday, ending a 30-country, 30,000-mile journey and becoming the youngest pilot to circle the globe alone in a small plane.
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It can be boring to cross an ocean alone, but music helps. It can be lonely to spend the night on an uninhabited island with only sea gulls for company. And it is unnerving when your aircraft’s backup fuel tank stops working.
These are not a teenager’s typical challenges, yet this was how Mack Rutherford, a 17-year-old Belgian-British pilot, spent his summer break as he flew alone around the world.
On Wednesday, Mack landed in Bulgaria, ending a record-setting journey that made him the youngest person to fly solo around the world in a small plane. At about 5 p.m. local time, he guided his Shark Aero, an ultralight aircraft that was modified to carry extra fuel, into Sofia West Airport, southwest of Sofia, Bulgaria’s capital.
“And touchdown,” he said calmly from inside the cockpit during a livestream of the landing at the end of the final leg, from Slovakia.
“There we go, ladies and gentlemen,” a narrator on the tarmac said to applause from people who had gathered to greet Mack. “We have a new world record.”
Mack waved and smiled before climbing out of the cockpit. “Very happy to be here after five long months,” he said.
The moment marked the end of a challenging and sometimes lonely journey that took Mack nearly 30,000 miles, with stops in 30 countries, in the five months since he took off from the same airport on March 23. He was 16 at the time.
The feat has nudged Travis Ludlow of Britain out of the ranking as the youngest person to fly around the world alone in a small aircraft. It took Mr. Ludlow, who was 18 years (and 149 days) old when he set the record in 2021 , 44 days to complete the 24,900-mile journey.
Solo flying, and breaking records doing it, runs in Mack’s family. He was at the controls of the same kind of aircraft that his sister, Zara Rutherford, then 19, was piloting when she set the world record in January as the youngest woman to fly solo around the world.
His family and sponsors, including ICDSoft, a web-hosting company based in Bulgaria, greeted him on the airstrip.
Mack told reporters on the tarmac that he had mixed feelings of excitement and frustration that the journey was at an end, and that he loved the unmatched sense of freedom of being in the air. After months of flying, some of it perilous, he said he felt “competent” and “able to look at a problem and work through a solution.”
Mack’s journey, which has been documented live online , made him the youngest person to fly solo around the world, and the youngest to do it in a microlight plane. It took him over deserts, forests, skyscrapers and sandstorms. From Bulgaria in March, he flew to Italy and then Greece. In May, he was in North Africa. Moving on after Kenya and Tanzania, his route took him through Madagascar and Mauritius.
There were numbing hours of solitude in the cramped cockpit of his plane, which reaches a cruising speed of 186 miles per hour, and also the marvels of the elements, like sandstorms in Sudan and blazing heat in the United Arab Emirates. He flew to China, South Korea and Japan, and from Japan to Alaska — a leg of the trip that took him more than 10 airborne hours.
From there, he navigated the West Coast of the United States to Mexico, and pivoted north again to Canada before crossing the Atlantic. Mack closed in on his aerial finale last weekend, landing in Aberdeen, Scotland, where he was welcomed with bagpipes and haggis, the distinctive Scottish dish of boiled sheep innards wrapped in a sheep’s stomach.
Mack said he knew he wanted to be a pilot as a child, and flew hundreds of hours with his British father, Sam Rutherford, a former army helicopter pilot who works as a professional “ferry” pilot, delivering planes for others on long-distance flights. His Belgian mother, Beatrice de Smet, is a lawyer and flies recreationally. Mack earned his license to fly microlight planes a few months after he turned 15.
On Tuesday, he touched down at an airstrip near Charleroi, in Southern Belgium, where he had learned to fly, inspired by his family’s generations of aviators. Then it was on to Slovakia. In an interview on Tuesday, as he prepared for the final section of his journey, he described moments of beauty and boredom circumnavigating the globe.
There were “so many of these wildly different types that had those ‘wow’ moments,” he said, referring to his experiences flying over the windswept Sahara, the national parks of Kenya, forests in Myanmar and Thailand, and the mountains of Alaska.
“Big cities of the U.S. as well,” he said. “I was surprised how close you can actually fly. I was able to fly around the Statue of Liberty.”
Flying over oceans can be monotonous, he said. He rarely eats. “I look around, listen to music,” he said. A 24-hour-long playlist, which includes Coldplay and Queen, kept him occupied. “That surprisingly fills up the time quite nicely,” he said.
One day in late July, as he was flying across the Pacific to the United States, he was forced to stop on Attu, an uninhabited island at Alaska’s westernmost edge, to wait out strong headwinds. The ordeal was a treacherous one. He had just finished the last of his food: Oreos and a protein bar. It was getting dark, there were mountains, low clouds and no living creatures but sea gulls.
“I stayed the night on a completely uninhabited island, which was pretty special,” he said. “I found a shed on the side of the runway. I stayed there for the night on a broken-down sofa. I didn’t sleep very well there.”
Mack also confronted technical perils. As he was flying from Luxor, Egypt, a fuel bladder switch stopped working. “I had no idea how I was going to be able to refuel,” he said. But once he descended to a lower altitude, it once again kicked in, he said.
His mother joined him in Dubai on June 21, his 17th birthday, and they watched the latest “Top Gun” movie in a theater, “which was really cool,” he said. But he was delayed in the emirate for more than a month as he sorted out visas and permits, trying to figure out a route across the Pacific Ocean that avoided Russia, because of the war in Ukraine.
“I wasn’t quite sure how it was going to work out,” he said. “We had no idea how we were going to get through. But I just cracked on.”
Eventually, Japan gave him permission to fly through its airspace, providing him with a feasible crossing.
While he eventually got his way, there are some tasks that he will not be able to avoid. Mack, who is entering his final year at Sherborne School, a boys’ boarding school in southern England next month, is expected to catch up on studies that he has missed since March, and to reflect on what comes next.
After landing on Wednesday, he said his next step would be to “go back to school and carry on that way. And keep flying.”

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A TIKTOK video shows an older man groping a woman aboard a Spirit Airlines flight - and the teen says no one intervened.
"The man was like 50-60s and I was so uncomfy @spiritairlines #fyp#foryou #harassmentawareness," read the video's caption, which was posted to TikTok.
"On my flight to California the man behind kept touching my arms and boobs," the video started.
The video shows the woman sitting in the window seat leaning back when she moves to show the man's hand grasping for air between the seat gap.
Posted on Wednesday night by the user @ mobilesushibar , the woman says she showed the video to Spirit flight attendants and those in her proximity, only to be ignored.
"And when I confronted him and showed the video to everyone around me and the flight attendants I was told to sit down and stay quiet 😐," the video narrated. "F you spirit airlines."
The poster got plenty of supportive messages following the video, with people urging she file a suit against Spirit.
"I’d yell and scream and make a scene, everyone needs to know," wrote one user.
"[T]hey told me to sit down and be quiet, and my mom told me the same," she added.
"@spiritairlines what are you going to do about this?!? This is APPALLING!!!" wrote another commenter.
The video has been watched over 810,000 times and has over 255,000 likes and comments since it was posted two days ago.
In a subsequent set of videos, the woman said she boarded the plane at 6AM with her family and sat in separate seats.
She said she then switched with a woman who wanted the aisle seat.
She said she was getting settled and began reading a book when she "felt a slight tough like something was caressing me right here"
"I wonder what this feeling could be, it was really subtle, and I reached my hand over and touched his finger tips," she continued.
She then texted her sister to tell her that she was being groped. "I thought it would stop there because he knows that I know that he was touching me because I touched his fingertips."
After some time passed and she resumed the previous position so she can read, "it happened again, so this is when I was like I can tell he's trying to reach for my boobs."
"So I have to sit there through an hour of harassment," she added to get video of him to show the flight attendants.
"He was trying to deny it," she said after showing them the video "and I was told to please calm down, sit down, be quiet."
"That made me really upset that no one cared that I was going through that for so long."
"The fact that I had to sit there and collect evidence for nothing speaks volumes."
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