Fedor Konyukhov stepped out of his gondola on wobbly legs. The landing time鈥4:30 p.m Australian Western Time on July 23鈥攎ade it official: the Russian explorer shattered the world record for circumnavigating the globe alone in a hot air balloon.
Konyukhov spent the last eleven days at 20,000 feet, sleeping intermittently and fighting off the cold. His trip took him across the southern hemisphere, from Western Australia and across the Pacific, over the tip of South America聽and just south of Cape Town, and back again to Australia鈥檚 rugged western coast. He beat the world record鈥斺攂y a full two days.
After more than a week of fretting over Konyukhov鈥檚 safety as he navigated gale-force storms and survived sub-zero temperatures in an exposed cockpit, the balloonist鈥檚 flight team finally relaxed as his dirigible passed over Perth at around 6 a.m. local time. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 believe this is happening,鈥 the 64 year old explorer鈥檚 son Oscar .
Landing a high-speed hot air balloon, though, is no simple task. During Konyukhov鈥檚 approach to Australia, he was traveling at up to 150 miles per hour as he rode a powerful polar jet stream across the southern sea. In the final hours of his flight, the Russian explorer had to work steadily to lose altitude and speed. Since it鈥檚 impossible to perfectly predict where the wind will take a balloon, the ground team dispatched a pilot to intercept Konyukhov around sunrise and followed the balloonist until he landed.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a bit of a game of chess to slow him down in the right place,鈥 said Nick Purvis, an employee of the Cameron Balloons, , before he landed.
The trip was not an easy one. A day ago, Konyukhov flew directly through an unexpectedly severe thunderstorm storm at 27,800 feet and had to navigate 鈥渘onstop electrical activity.鈥 The tiny gondola that had been his home had no heat for the last two days,聽all of his water was frozen and Konyukhov had to melt it using the balloon鈥檚 main burner,聽and most of his touch-screen equipment failed as he battled temperatures down to minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit.
The perils of a solo balloon trip gave Konyukhov little time to sleep. According to his flight team, he was only able to sleep in short bursts鈥30, maybe 45 minutes鈥斅爏ince he departed on July 12.
Konyukhov, the head of ,聽in Moscow, has spent his life on extreme expeditions. According to the biography on his website, he鈥檚 summited Everest twice, sailed around the world four times, solo-rowed across the Pacific, and set records for most time spent in various types of hot air balloons. He is also, , an ordained Russian orthodox priest. 聽