"Hmm, this doesn't look like
France," Trappe posted to his Facebook page late Thursday, along with the
coordinates of his landing. Via his messaging system, Trappe
spoke to Barcroft Media, a British company he partnered with. He said he feared
he might die as he attempted to crash-land his balloon contraption.
"Honestly did not know if I would
survive that landing!" Trappe said of touching down in pitch darkness near Blow
Me Down Provincial Park in the wilderness of Newfoundland. He then messaged, "Situation
stable. Have 60l water 38L. Gatorade 60,000 cal food. Have shelter and exposure
gear." Trappe said he would stay the
night at his landing site before grabbing what gear he could -- including
footage he took of the shorter-than-planned trip -- and making his way home.
Canadian teams have begun
searching the forest where Trappe crash-landed. If the patrol is unsuccessful,
Trappe, who has confirmed he is safe and well on Facebook, is prepared to spend
another night in the mountainous region, which is populated by black bears and
moose, said Sgt. Richard White of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
If the teams can't find him, or
if he can't get a commercial team to extract him, he plans to make his way out
of the mountainous forest on foot and head to a local community. Fans followed the adventurer's
movements on a website that showed his longitude and latitude along the journey
via a satellite tracker he took with him. Trappe took off from Caribou,
Maine, early Thursday with 370 balloons.
"Nobody has ever made a flight
like this, using only small helium balloons -- in manned flight -- across the
ocean," Trappe wrote on his
website, clusterballoon.com
, after the style of ballooning used in his
attempt to across the Atlantic. In 2010, he was the first person
to cross the English Channel using a balloon cluster. Five people have died trying to
cross the Atlantic with balloons. Trappe spent two years preparing for the
transatlantic flight, and his trip to Europe was supposed to take about a
week.
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