Island Life Magazine Ltd June/July 2011 | Page 39

INTERVIEW He recalls: “The first morning at the Oast House I woke to the sound of a Tiger Moth plane taxiing past the window. It was the landlord, Dave Wood, who had bought the farm and 60 acres of land and laid it out beautifully as grass runways for his three Tiger Moths. I had never had any interest in aviation up to that point, but he told me how he had found and restored them and regularly flew them from his land. “He asked me if I wanted to go up with him. I said yes without hesitation. The only time I had flown before that was in a Jumbo Jet, so it was quite an experience, absolutely amazing.” When Chris suggested he would love to fly one himself, Dave threw down the challenge: “You get your licence and I will teach you.” He did exactly that, acquiring the licence and then learning to fly in a little over a year. Then purely by chance a huge hot air balloon landed on the runway outside his house one day – and that sparked the start of Chris’s other life in the sky, which ultimately led to taking part in those remarkable daredevil stunts. But at the time such adrenalin-filled capers were still on the distant horizon, and as he soon discovered it certainly wasn’t all plain sailing through the clouds. Initially the Aussies who landed his balloon on the runway outside the family home reached an agreement with landlord Dave to use the site to fly his eight-passenger craft, one of the biggest available at the time. They also had a small sports balloon, and eventually Chris became involved in helping to maintain it and then learnt to fly it. In 1992 he decided he wanted www.visitislandlife.com 39