Gulf Today

Frenchman successful­ly crosses Channel

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SANGATTE: A French daredevil who spent years developing a jet-powered hoverboard zoomed across the English Channel on Sunday, fulfilling his quest ater pulling off a tricky refuelling manoeuvre that cut short his first atempt 10 days ago.

Franky Zapata blasted off on his “Flyboard” from Sangate on the northern coast of France at 8:17 am (0617 GMT) for the 35-kilometre (22-mile) trip to St. Margaret’s Bay in Dover.

Escorted by three helicopter­s, he soared across the water in the early morning light and landed 22 minutes later in the picturesqu­e bay, to the applause of dozens of onlookers and journalist­s.

“I’m feeling good. I’m feeling happy, I’m feeling lucky. This is just an amazing moment for me,” Zapata told AFP ater landing.

He said the indicators in the visor of his helmet showed he raced over the busy shipping lane at a speed of 160-170 km/h (100-105 mph), doing zig-zags as he neared the coast to try to ease the fatigue in his legs.

Minutes ater descending from the metal platform where he landed his crat, Zapata broke down in tears of emotion while talking on the phone to his 10-year-old son, who could be heard saying, “Dad, you’re the best!”

“I was almost at my limits -- there was still enough fuel in my pack for another 10 kilometres or so. Maybe I could have done five or six,” Zapata said later at a press conference back in Sangate.

“People are passionate about this, everyone dreams about flying,” he said, recalling his fascinatio­n with the hoverboard in the 1985 hit movie “Back to the Future,” set in 2015.

“And then 2015 came around, and there were still no hoverboard­s, so we said ‘OK, we’re going to do it’.”

Zapata, a 40-year-old former jet-ski champion, made his first atempt on July 25, to coincide with the 110th anniversar­y of Louis Bleriot’s historic first crossing of the Channel by plane.

But he had to be fished from the water ater failing to land on a boat to refuel -- his backpack carries some 35 kilogramme­s (77 pounds) of kerosene, enough to keep him alot for around 10 minutes.

This time the refuelling boat was bigger and had a larger landing area.

Asked if he considered himself Bleriot’s successor, Zapata told BFM television: “It’s not really comparable, he was one of the first men to fly.”

 ?? Agecne France-presse ?? Franky Zapata on his jet-powered ‘flyboard’ flies past the belfry of the city hall of Calais.
Agecne France-presse Franky Zapata on his jet-powered ‘flyboard’ flies past the belfry of the city hall of Calais.

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