Female bi-plane pilot takes off on 13,000-mile solo flight

Updated
Tracey Curtis-Taylor to fly around world
Tracey Curtis-Taylor to fly around world




An adventurous British aviatrix is preparing to begin a 13,000-mile solo flight from Britain to Australia in a vintage open cockpit bi-plane.

Self-styled "Bird in a Bi-Plane" Tracey Curtis-Taylor, 53, will set off in her 1942 Boeing Stearman Spirit of Artemis aircraft from Farnborough, Hampshire.

See also: Mysterious 'Lancaster bomber' plane spotted flying over Derbyshire

She will fly across 23 countries, making 50 refuelling stops over the next 14 weeks, before finally arriving in Sydney in early 2016.


Aviation Pioneers - Amy Johnson - London - 1930
Aviation Pioneers - Amy Johnson - London - 1930




She will follow in the slipstream of Amy Johnson (pictured above), the pioneering British aviator who became the first woman to fly solo from Britain to Australia in 1930.

Her route will take her across Europe and the Mediterranean to Jordan, over the Arabian desert, across the Gulf of Oman to Pakistan, India and across Asia.

She hopes to recreate the essence of Johnson's era of flying, with an open cockpit, stick and rudder flying with basic period instruments and a short range between landing points.

But she is not unfamiliar with this form of flying. In 2013, she flew 8,000-miles solo from Cape Town to Goodwood, West Sussex, to recreate the 1928 flight of Lady Mary Heath.

See also : Man pays £43,000 for bomber flight

A small support crew will travel in a light modern aircraft to record her journey to Australia, and day to day news will be posted on an interactive website.

Ms Curtis-Taylor said the flight is a "destiny which was always meant to be", and she is looking forward to following in the footsteps of aviators like Johnson.

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