KORTRIJK, Belgium-An intrepid Belgian-British teenager took to the skies on Wednesday in her quest to become the youngest woman to fly around the world solo.
With her parents looking on, 19-year-old Zara Rutherford took off from an airstrip in Kortrijk, western Belgium, in gusty, overcast conditions. Rutherford is aiming to break the record set by US aviator Shaesta Waiz, who was 30 when she set the world benchmark in 2017.
She hopes to show other young women and girls that the sky’s the limit when it comes to making their own mark on the history of aviation. Rutherford aims to fly her fast and light Shark sport aircraft over five continents and 52 countries, including China.
The first leg was a short hop across the English Channel from her Belgian hometown of Kortrijk to England. Her three-month voyage will then take her over oceans, deserts and the vast Siberian wilderness. She will try to avoid daunting main air hubs-apart from New York’s busy John F. Kennedy airport-in her tiny 325-kilogram plane. Instead, she plans to touch down on smaller airports and airfields for overnight rests and refueling.
“I am very nervous, I think. I am also in a bit of disbelief. I think my next step is to check the weather again,” she said before takeoff. “I am reaching Scotland tonight. I am not sure that will work. But I will try my best, while staying safe, of course.”
Rutherford comes from a family of pilots. She’s been traveling in small planes since the age of 6, began jumping out of them-with a parachute-at 11 and then started flying herself at 14. She’s logged about 130 hours of solo flights.
She said she wants to inspire girls and young women to get into aviation and encourage them to study science, technology, engineering and mathematics, also known as STEM.
“This is her dream. It’s what she wants to do,” Rutherford’s father, Sam, said. “I am very, very proud that she wants to try and attract more young women and girls into STEM and aviation. Because 5 percent of pilots in the world are women. That’s really not a statistic of which we should be proud.”
Extra fuel tank
Rutherford’s plane was specially fitted out for the journey. It’s normally a two-seater, but an extra fuel tank now takes up one of them. That will also help erase any doubts about whether she’s flying alone.
The Shark is too small for long-distance flying over the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. For the crossing over the Atlantic, Rutherford plans to fly up through Europe and over Greenland. She’ll head down through the United States, then back up to Alaska to cross the Pacific. From there, she will head across Asia back to Europe.
Mental fatigue and loneliness on such long-distance flights can be a big challenge.
“These are things I am keeping in mind. I will also be on the phone with my parents often and just friends and family,” Rutherford said. “Sadly, I cannot watch movies. But I have music lined up, I have podcasts lined up. So hopefully, that should keep me busy whilst I am up in the air for five, six hours at a time.”
The men’s record for a solo round the world flight is held by 18-year-old Travis Ludlow of Britain.