Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Old blind pilot flies London-Sidney‎

A blind British adventurer, Miles Hilton-Barber touched down in Sydney on Monday to end an epic flight by a microlight aircraft from London.

Miles braved snowstorms, freezing temperatures and torrential downpours during his 54-day 13,500-mile journey under the supervision of sighted co-pilot Richard Meredith-Hardy.

"It's the fulfillment of an amazing dream," Hilton-Barber, 58, told reporters at Sydney's Bankstown airport. "I've wanted to be a pilot since I was a kid. Now I'm totally blind and I've had the privilege of flying more than halfway around the world."

Hilton-Barber, who lost his eyesight to a hereditary condition about 20 years ago, is hoping the trip will raise $2 million for the charity "Seeing is Believing," which works for the prevention of blindness in developing countries.


He took to the skies from Biggin Hill air base in south London on March 7 in a microlight aircraft, which looks like a cross between a tricycle and a motorized hang-glider, with the aid of an audio device that reads out navigational information such as air speed and altitude.

Hilton-Barber has also conquered Mount Kilimanjaro and Mont Blanc, ran marathons in the Sahara and Gobi deserts, and even attempted to reach the South Pole, hauling a sledge over 250 miles of Antarctic

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