Hoverboard inventor crosses English Channel
Associated Press
ST. MARGARET’S BAY, England
Is it a bird? A plane? No, it’s a French inventor flying over the English Channel on his hoverboard.
Looking like a superhero, Franky Zapata successfully completed the famed 22-mile journey in just 22 minutes Sunday morning, reaching speeds of up to 110 mph per hour on the flyboard that has made him a French household name.
Propelled by a power pack full of kerosene, Zapata set off from Sangatte in France’s Pas-de-Calais region and landed in St. Margaret’s Bay, beyond the white cliffs of Dover, in southeast England. He stopped only once, on the British side, to refuel his futuristic invention from a boat in the choppy waters.
“I’m feeling happy ... It’s just an amazing moment in my life,” he said in English following his touchdown in Britain. “The last 10% (of the flight) was easier ... because I had the time to look at the cliffs.”
It was, of course, the record for such a trip: No one else has tried to cross the channel in this way.
It was also a personal record – the furthest distance that the 40-year-old, who drew nationwide attention after whizzing above European leaders in Paris at Bastille Day celebrations, had ever traveled atop his hoverboard.
The wind in the Channel, especially gusts, presented a major challenge, he said, adding that he bends into gusts but is destabilized if the wind quickly dies. It was, he acknowledged, no easy feat – especially given the physical endurance it requires. He said his leg muscles were “burning” during the flight.
“Your body resists the wind, and because the board is attached to my feet, all my body has to resist to the wind,” he told reporters. “I tried to enjoy it and not think about the pain.”
Witness Mark Kerr, a 60-year-old hospital librarian from Dover, said it was quite an unusual sight.
“Spectacular and amazing. Not everyday you see a man standing up, flying across the Channel, being chased by three helicopters,” he said.