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.
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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