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Man ties balloons to chair to take flight across US desert

Using his trusty BB gun to help him return to Earth, a 48-year-old gas station owner flew a lawn chair rigged with helium-filled balloons more than 320 kilometers across the Oregon desert, landing in a field in Idaho.

  • AP
  • Published: 10:27 July 6, 2008
  • Gulf News

  • Kent Couch created a sensation when he touched down safely in a pasture after lifting off from Bend, Oregon.
  • Image Credit: AP
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Cambridge, Idaho: Using his trusty BB gun to help him return to Earth, a 48-year-old gas station owner flew a lawn chair rigged with helium-filled balloons more than 320 kilometers across the Oregon desert, landing in a field in Idaho.

Kent Couch created a sensation in this tiny farming community, where he touched down safely on Saturday in a pasture after lifting off from Bend, Oregon, and was soon greeted by dozens of people who gave him drinks of water, local plumber Mark Hetz said.

"My wife works at the City Market," Hetz said. "She called and said, 'The balloon guy in the lawn chair just flew by the market, and if you look out the door you can see him.'

"We go outside to look, and lo and behold, there he is. He's flying by probably 100 to 200 feet off the ground.

"He takes his BB gun and shoots some balloons to lower himself to the ground. When he hit the ground he released all the little tiny balloons. People were racing down the road with cameras. They were all talking and laughing."

Couch covered around 378 kilometres in about nine hours after lifting off at dawn from his gas station riding in a green lawn chair rigged with an array of more than 150 giant party balloons.

It was not clear where Couch went after he landed.

"If I had the time and money and people, I'd do this every weekend," Couch said before getting into the chair. "Things just look different from up there. You've moving so slowly. The best thing is the peace, the serenity.

"Originally, I wanted to do it because of boyhood dreams. I don't know about girls, but I think most guys look up in the sky and wish they could ride on a cloud."

Couch's wife, Susan, called him crazy. "It's never been a dull moment since I married him."

This was Couch's third balloon flight. He realised it would be possible after watching a TV show about the 1982 lawn chair flight over Los Angeles of truck driver Larry Walters, who gained folk hero fame but was fined $1,500 for violating air traffic rules.

In 2006, Couch had to parachute out after popping too many balloons. And last year he flew 310 kilometres to the sagebrush of northeastern Oregon, short of his goal.

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