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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Oregon balloonist headed to Iraq for ‘dream’ flight

Fellow daredevil’s invitation inspires lawn-chair pilot

This July 5, 2008, file photo shows Kent Couch lifting off in Bend, Ore., riding a lawn chair for a flight that ended 235 miles away in Idaho. (Associated Press)
Jeff Barnard Associated Press

Lawn-chair balloonist Kent Couch boarded a plane Thursday for the start of a journey that he hopes will end in Iraq with a safe launch and landing beneath a huge cluster of party balloons.

Couch made headlines worldwide in 2008 when he flew a specially rigged lawn chair supported by more than 150 helium-filled party balloons from the parking lot of the gas station he owns in Bend, Ore., to an Idaho field. The trip spanned 235 miles.

Couch says Iraqi daredevil Fareed Lafta invited him to Baghdad for a Nov. 15 flight at a youth conference in the Green Zone.

Couch said he was “pretty sure I had hung up my hat on this” before Lafta called. But the timing for another airborne adventure was right.

“Now that Saddam Hussein is gone and the U.S. is pulling out, it is time Iraq really steps up and begins to dream about putting the country back together,” Couch told the Associated Press from the airport in Redmond, Ore. “I think between having a U.S. citizen and an Iraqi citizen launch together, where we are saying we are fulfilling our dream, it will encourage them to dream, knowing the sky is the limit if they just reach out and try.”

Couch plans to rig 300 balloons to lift the two men sitting in a pair of lawn chairs for an overnight flight of 400 miles at 25,000 feet, which will require oxygen masks.

He has shipped a pair of lawn chairs, the framework to support them, and hundreds of party balloons to Dubai, where Lafta lives. Lafta has gotten the visas and permissions they will need for their flight.

Couch said his biggest fear is floating into neighboring Iran, but he hopes to have favorable winds.