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When reader Tom flew a MiG-29UB for his birthday

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One of our readers and occasional commentators, Tom, recently turned 30.  I’m not sure what you did for your 30th, but Tom runs a successful IT business and thought he would push the boat out.

So he decided to go to Russia and fly a MiG-29UB.  As you do.

He wrote it up (in a rather idiosyncratic way, admittedly!) for his own site but I thought it was good Saturday HfP material and he was happy for me to reproduce the article here, slightly edited.  Over to you Tom ……

When I grew up I wanted so badly to be an RAF pilot.  Apparently, for reasons I cannot yet work out, spending my entire childhood on a computer did not count as a qualification. Neither did continuing to spend my entire adulthood on one.  

Turning 30, the RAF were not going to come calling anytime soon, so an alternative was required.  I figured I’d have to settle for flying a Russian MiG.

tom1

I didn’t think much of the inflight food, nor the inflight reading material, which consisted of only a sick bag.  The lounge was subpar and, to top it all off, their frequent flier policy was lacking.

I can set aside these indifferences seeing that:

I reached almost twice the speed of sound,

ascended to twice the height of a commercial airliner and

could see the curvature of the earth.

It is called an Edge of Space trip for a reason. For a few minutes the only people further from the earths surface than the pilot and myself were those in the International Space Station.

Then came the aerobatics ……

tom2

At 10km the pilot ascends and drops the speed to 0, which results in the plane dropping and going into a nose dive to experience zero gravity. Then he spent 10 minutes trying to make me throw up.

First with loops, then upside down manoeuvres, flying at 90 degrees and stuff I cannot remember as I was too busy trying not to poo myself.

After every increase in G-force, he asks if I’m ok. Lesson: never try and impress a Russian with bravery, as all he did was increase the amount of pressure. Over and over again.

The sheer power of negative Gs and +7.3 was sufficient to result in me making noises not befitting of a human. Or animal. Maybe the sound of an ape punching a squirrel. In those brief seconds of experiencing an indescribable force, I created my own word that goes a little something like “arggfasfsdfsdfs”.

The pilot also gave me control of the MiG.  After just a few seconds of this awesome power (and feeling like I was about to flip the plane) I promptly decided I was fond of my limbs and gave him back control.  Seeing that I do not have a drivers license or currently even own a bicycle, going from simply having to move my legs in a forwardly direction to flying a fighter jet was a step too far.

On landing, and after managing not to humiliate myself by staying conscious the entire time and not throwing up, I was told 50% of passengers are ill and most need to lay down.

Everyone congratulated me on not being a wimp (I may have looked calm, but 6 hours after the flight my hands were still shaking from adrenaline) and suddenly we were fellow comrades. I was about to defect, until I realised I wasn’t in the military and it made no sense.

Then came the award presentation, a Soviet Union hat and that was it; I was taken back to the airport, where flying was once again a bore.

Moral of the story? MiGs are awesome. Or you’re never too old to live your childhood dreams. Or something about something and reaching for the stars.  Oh, just go find some inspirational poster and read that.  Luckily I never wanted to be an astronaut.

If you want to give this a try, you can book your own MiGFlug flight here.

Comments (61)

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  • Alan says:

    Fantastic review, Tom – although I think to get the full HfP insight we need Rob to book a flight next! (and he’s not allowed to pass the task onto Anika :P)

  • Kipto says:

    Just out of interest. How much did the flight cost ?

  • Anon says:

    Awesome Tom!

    Who’s gonna be the first HfO’er to burn VS miles on Virgin Galactic???

  • James says:

    Is this the £13,000 birthday bash?
    The article certainly made me want to throw up.
    You could get your own MF slave for a year for that much.
    An absurd waste of money – but given his profession it doesn’t surprise me.

    • Toby says:

      1) Yep, sure looks like it. What a fun way to have a 30th! If only I had £13k haha!
      2) You should have stopped reading if you started to feel sick… I wouldn’t recommend flying in a MiG … thats for sure!
      3) …
      4) Don’t believe everything the Daily Mail says about businessman and directors wasting money. This chap earned the money himself and if he likes flying, well done to him for going out and doing something he likes.

      Really cool story!

    • Brian says:

      I think this was Rob’s way of trying to raise the morale of all those MF crew members who earn less than that in base pay per year…Not quite sure what it has to do with ‘maximising earn/burn opportunities for miles’ (unless Tom paid for it with his credit card and got Hilton Gold at one fell swoop), but I guess it’s a quiet day for proper news.

      • Mr Dee says:

        They take Amex and he got a 241 voucher in one go!

      • Leo says:

        I’m not really a miserypuss and I’m generally not overly moralistic about how people spend the money they earn but I’m with you on this one James/Brian, given various comments on HfP on the BA strike over the last couple of days.

        • Fenny says:

          Wow! You must really dislike the Radio 2 Children in Need auction. People cough up £20k odd for the chance to do all kinds of lame things.

        • the-very-real-arry says:

          Not you particularly Leo – but what a pathetic range of comments

          You earn the money through endeavour, you pay your taxes, you spend your money as you see fit

          Sure we could all do better at helping others

          But why come down negative on somebody who spends a slightly larger amount of money on a memorable experience than you spend on an instantly forgettable packet of crisps?

          (And you didn’t optimise your earning potential because you were slow/ lazy/ no new ideas/ disadvantaged yeah right/ born in August etc the list goes on)

          I don’t get it – it’s the politics/ thoughts of hate & jealousy

          • Genghis says:

            Agreed. Up to Tom how he wants to spend his hard earned coin.
            “I spent a lot of money on booze, birds and fast cars. The rest I just squandered.”

          • Leo says:

            Hmmm well it’s more a question of running this particular story at a time when there is a good deal of negative comment towards people on this site who earn a similar amount for a year’s work. Clearly this bloke can do what he likes with his own money.

          • the-very-real-arry says:

            you’re right (Leo) that criticising people complaining about the BA 2nd tier staff who can’t get by & may strike for better conditions is a bit rich

            they are at the end of their tether

            BA got that slightly wrong, just a few % more and it would be sorted

            the staff I spoke to on my flight out on Friday said it was the very unfair contrast between their benefits vs the benefits of the original staff that really grated

          • Brian says:

            I wasn’t in any way getting at Tom for spending his money on what he wants – good for him, I say, if that’s what floats his boat. I was slightly quizzical about the point of running such an article on HfP, given it has nothing to do with earning or burning points or miles, which is what the site is ostensibly about.

            I was amused that such an article should run on the same day as a plug for the Amazon link in the Bits article ‘to keep HfP ticking over’…

          • Rob says:

            I know Tom quite well, he is a long term reader and there is an obvious aviation angle. And it is a Sunday – I do generally save the offbeat stuff for weekends.

    • Sideysid says:

      And while lying on your deathbed, what would be more of an achievement in life, saving away £13k or that you’ve been to the edge of space?

      Horses for courses, but if I had the money spare it’s definitely something I would consider. I may have to wait until £-€ rate gets a lot better however.

      • Jon says:

        I was wondering whether he booked it before or after Brexit… 😉

        • Tom C says:

          I paid the deposit pre-Brexit and the rest post. You can work out just how much that swing in currency cost. Definitely the last time I listen to the polls.

          • Jon says:

            Ouch 😉 I know the feeling (albeit on a somewhat smaller scale) – I should have prepaid the hotels for my current Asia trip… Oh well, win some, lose some 😉

          • Alan says:

            Eek not good – sounds like it was an amazing experience though regardless 😀

  • Andrew says:

    Thanks for sharing Tom!

  • Alex W says:

    £13k is quite cheap I think. The total cost of operating UK fighters is probably around 3 or 4 times that per flying hour.

  • Janeyferr says:

    For my 30th I indulged my transportation desires by staying in a train carriage next to the east coast mainline, using a Groupon.

  • Fenny says:

    What a fab birthday celebration. For my 30th, Dad and I went to see Batman Forever and I had a dodgy Chinese, which resulted in 2 days off work!

    Growing up, I wanted to join the Navy. My careers teacher at school failed to notice I lacked the necessary attributes, but the CPOs at the recruiting officer managed to spot that I was a girl, therefore not eligible.

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