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Air-traffic controllers and Swiss diplomats were recruited
to open the way across Egypt, Yemen, India, China and
Japan, showing that a circumnavigation is also a world
tour of countries, people and regional politics.
Strategic decisions were often painful. Go north to
faster winds, or south to the slower currents?
As they approached the Pacific, the decision became
critical, for the southern route added 4000 kilometres
to the journey. However, storms raging in the north
forced the meteorologists to choose the southerly route.
The vast ocean made them homesick for the reassuring
splendour of the African desert and the Indian plains
that the balloon had flown over during the past 11 days.
The seemingly infinite extent of waves became a mirror
before which Bertrand and Brian were alone with their
emotions. In winds of 30 km/h, surrounded by threatening
clouds and cut off from the rest of the world by satellite-antenna
problems, they watched helplessly as their prospects
of success receded with their diminishing reserves of
Propane gas. They could only learn to accept their fears
because it is as futile to fight one's emotions as
it is to try to master the wind.
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