Nine-year-old Bobby Bradley floated into history early on Saturday, taking off solo in a hot air balloon and landing perfectly about 30 minutes later to become the youngest trained pilot to accomplish such a feat.
Showing maturity and composure well beyond his years, Bradley proved any doubters wrong as he strategically touched down on a dirt road — exactly as his parents had instructed. Some among a small crowd gathered for the event then doused the boy with non-alcoholic champagne and silly string as he knelt to drink his celebratory glass.
“It was awesome. It was amazing. I loved it,” he said.
“Absolutely perfect,” is how his mother, Tami, described the landing.
His father, Troy Bradley, proudly remarked that his son “flew the way we knew he could.”
The boy took off to the cheers of more than 50 friends, family and classmates who gathered at 5am in Albuquerque, New Mexico, to drive in a caravan to a remote field that was chosen for its lack of power lines and other potential hazards.
Takeoff came shortly before 7am, along with three other balloons whose pilots included a designated balloon examiner for the US Federal Aviation Administration and a balloonist who helped make Bradley’s special ultra-light craft.
The boy’s flight lasted 26 minutes.
“I didn’t want to land,” he said afterward. “I wanted to keep going. It’s fun out there.”
Although his mother said she would not normally recommend that nine-year-olds fly solo, she said it was a natural progression for her son, who is “not your normal nine-year-old.”
Bobby is a fourth-generation balloonist and has been flying in them for more than half his life, with his parents and some of the sport’s most experienced and decorated pilots.
He has nearly 30 hours of flight time with his father in a standard hot air balloon, but he can’t get his pilot’s license until he’s 16, so his family and friends built the smaller balloon that is classified as an ultra-light aircraft to enable Saturday’s solo flight.
Both of his parents have been licensed pilots since they were teenagers. The two won the America’s Challenge Gas Balloon Race, one of the country’s biggest events in balloon racing, in 1998. Troy Bradley also helped pilot the first balloon to fly from North America to Africa and has set dozens of world records in ballooning.
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