It’s no wonder why. The sky is fall-over backwards big, wrapping around you in a way that hints at infinite possibilities. After buttery sunsets fade into glowing orange then purple light, the heavens do their high-wattage flexing. Maybe this struck him as an invitation, and maybe that celestial pull was amplified by the proximity to Hollywood, where his fantasies of fame could be spun up into life.
It was some intermingling of these elements that brought Hughes and his friend Waldo Stakes here, like so many others who found their way to Southern California’s mythological landscape from places like Oklahoma City and Chicago: hungry but broke, flogging a dream, bristling with intelligence, and willing to chase an idea that others might consider unreasonable – like launching a man into the sky in a home-made steam-powered rocket.
Pause for a moment and think about the undeniable elegance and utter simplicity of it: heating water until it launches – in a rocket, like from a child’s drawing! Thousands of feet up! Has there ever been an idea so fanciful and yet so completely attainable? And what if that was just a precursor to something even more fantastic – being the first civilian to send himself more than 100 km up to the edge of space?
All of this made total sense to Hughes and Stakes in the two years since this latest idea had come. But then there was a problem.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Popular Mechanics September/October 20 21-Ausgabe von Popular Mechanics South Africa.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Popular Mechanics September/October 20 21-Ausgabe von Popular Mechanics South Africa.
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