CARIBBEAN AFFAIRS
Young Jamaican
pilot sets two world records
"They told me I was
too young. They told me I didn't have enough money and that
I couldn't do this, that I don't have the wisdom, the
strength or the experience. They told me I would never come
back home."
Twenty-three-year-old
Jamaican-born Barrington Irving Jr. (centre), who has set
two world records by being the first person of African
descent and the youngest person ever to fly solo around the
globe, is greeted by his parents, Rev. Barrington Irving
(left), his mother Clover (second left), brothers
Christopher and Ricardo. Irving arrived at the Opa-Locka
Airport in Miami yesterday morning to hundreds of cheers
from onlookers, the media and dignitaries who came out to
welcome him
Safe and sound!
Standing tall on the tarmac of the Opa-Locka Airport in
Miami yesterday, Barrington Irving, the world's youngest and
first black man to set two world records by flying solo
around the globe, responded to all those who didn't believe
in him.
In an emotional and
touching speech, he said, "Guess what? All those people who
tried to put me down, it's done, and now what?"
Arriving to a water
salute from two fire trucks, a praying group of clergy,
youth drummers, thunderous cheers and flag-waving Jamaicans,
complemented by cameramen and journalists falling over each
other, Irving disembarked from his US$600,000 Lincair
Colombia 400 single-engine aircraft, escorted by his younger
brothers, Ricardo and Christopher.
The 23-year-old,
Jamaican-born, raised in inner-city Miami, Florida, pilot
stood proud.
In the midst of the
excitement, his mother Clover Irving fought back tears, his
father Barrington Irving took giant steps, and Jamaicans in
the audience applauded, having witnessed the historic
moment.
Housed in the
veritable Ferrari of small aircraft, Irving traversed four
continents, clocking more than 130 hours of flight time on a
97-day, 26,800-mile 'World Flight Adventure' that included
stops in the Azores, Spain, Greece, Egypt, Dubai, India,
Thailand, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan.
In the tradition of
Charles Lindbergh
Returning two
months later than expected and at a cost of US$2 million,
the young pilot has followed in the tradition of Charles
Lindbergh, the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic
Ocean, his heroes the Tuskegee Airmen, and his mentors Erik
Lindbergh, Steve Fossett and Dick Rutan, who supported his
efforts.
Paying tribute to
his family and sponsors, Irving, whose purpose in making the
flight was to inspire inner-city and minority youth to
consider pursuing careers in aviation and aerospace, said
there were times during the flight that he became mentally
and physically broken, but it was worth it.
Irving, who named
his aircraft 'Inspiration', told the hundreds that gathered
that there were times when he became very discouraged and
frustrated, "mentally frustrated", to the point that he lost
15 lb.
"And I now need a
haircut," he quipped.