On a lightweight wing and Caged Womenpossibly a few prayers, Sacha Dench gracefully glided over Dover's white cliffs Monday, becoming the first woman to cross the English Channel in a paramotor.
It was a remarkable feat and just the latest leg in a Herculean effort that's seen the British conservationist fly from the icy Russian tundra to British soil, tracing the migratory route of the Bewick's swan.
SEE ALSO: This woman is flying 4,500 miles with swans to save themDench's journey, which will end in Gloucestershire in the south west of England after she delivers a petition to Downing Street to lobby for swan conservation, has seen her travel some 7,000 km over 11 countries. Its goal: to see first hand the challenges these beautiful, dwindling birds face as they make their epic annual journey west -- and to educate some of the communities they encounter on the way.
Mashablespoke to Dench at the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT) HQ in May as she was practising flights and honing her tech setup. The preparation involved was stupendous: miles and miles of test flights; customised gear ranging from a heated body suit powered by the paramotor's engine to hacked eReaders used as GPS devices; and an immense amount of behind-the-scenes planning.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The trip itself began in September and was a bumpy ride of ups and downs. Dench soared to amazing heights, flying just meters from a migrating flock of swans, persuading locals to think twice about shooting the precious birds, and witnessing stunning scenes from her frosty perch.
However, there were also more than a few troughs along the way, including a damaged knee that saw her needing an MRI scan in St Petersburg, Russia and a set of wheels added to her flying machine, and the news that one tagged swan had perished on its journey. The bird, named Charlotte, encountered bad weather in Estonia and her GPS collar confirmed that she didn't make it out alive.
“This is such sad news," Dench said at the time. "Looking at a beautiful Bewick’s swan, you don’t appreciate how incredibly tough they need to be to complete this gruelling journey. I have an engine and a support team and, even so, it’s without a doubt the most physically and emotionally challenging thing I’ve ever done."
Dench's journey aimed to raise awareness of the plight of the Bewick's swan, whose numbers have dropped from 29,000 to 18,000 between 1995 and 2010. And the best place to follow on was her spectacular Instagram feed. Here are some of the highlights.
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
The petition to save the Bewick's swans is on the Flight of the Swans site.
Topics Instagram
Poets on Couches: Rita Dove Reads Ingeborg Bachmann by Rita Dove“The Lottery”: PGClimbing Desolation Peak by Alison BechdelWhy are people leaving Substack?Watch the Summer 2021 Issue Launch by The Paris ReviewWhy are people leaving Substack?The Voice of ACT UP Culture by Sarah SchulmanRedux: Seventy Memories by The Paris ReviewRedux: Mother for Whom the Whole Sky by The Paris ReviewRemembering Janet Malcolm by Katie RoipheThe 'Mean Girls' directors break down how social media shaped their movie musicalKnow Thyself by Meghan O’GieblynStaff Picks: Dopamine, Magazines, and Exhaustive Guides from A to Z by The Paris ReviewLanguage Once Removed: An Interview with Sara Deniz Akant by Lauren KaneWhy are people leaving Substack?'True Detective: Night Country': Is the long night a real thing?Redux: Mother for Whom the Whole Sky by The Paris ReviewStaff Picks: Miners, Mauretania, and Melancholy by The Paris ReviewPoets on Couches: Donika Kelly Reads Taylor Johnson by Donika KellyFlower Moon by Nina MacLaughlin Ecuador vs. Brazil 2025 livestream: Watch World Cup Qualifiers for free The Worst Best Coloring Book Ever by Sadie Stein Parsing Middle Earth Contract, and Other News by Sadie Stein Happy Birthday, Abraham Lincoln by Sadie Stein Sharon Olds, “Diagnosis” by Sadie Stein Allen Ginsberg Snaps, and Other News by Sadie Stein Chatterley Sex Advice, and Other News by Sadie Stein The NYRB Fiftieth Anniversary Kickoff, in Tweets by Sadie Stein What We’re Loving: Fires, Isolation, Whispering Gallery by The Paris Review Notes from a Bookshop: February, or the Folly of Love by Kelly McMasters Gertrude Stein, Monster Hunter, and Other News by Sadie Stein Sir George Douglas’s “The Strange Visitor” by Sadie Stein Didactic Seuss, and Other News by Sadie Stein On This Day by Sadie Stein Getting Caught by Drew Bratcher Cruise Control by Ben Parker Literary Valentines by Timothy Leo Taranto Questions of Travel by Sadie Stein Vanity of Vanities by Sadie Stein When Agatha Christie Was Investigated by MI5 by Sadie Stein
1.5779s , 10157.40625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Caged Women】,Unobstructed Information Network