Drawing A Crown To Celebrate The King's Coronation: A Very Interesting Flight
Amal Larhild's flight around the UK drawing a crown to celebrate the King's Coronation last weekend.
The famous pilot Amal Larhlid had yet another special way of celebrating the coronation. Larhlid, who drew the late Queen’s portrait back in October last year, took her plane to the sky to draw the coronation crown over the same air space in Maidenhead. She flew from White Waltham, where Prince Philip flew small planes in 1953.
This special flight took around two hours to complete, with Amal departing White Waltham at around 12:40 pm and then arriving back into the airport at 2:50 pm.
G-WWAL, the Piper PA-28R-180 Cherokee Arrow used for this special flight. Image Credit: Derek Pedley/AirTeamImages.
G-WWAL was the Piper PA-28R-180 that Amal operated for this special and unique flight around the UK.
Amal Larhlid in the cockpit
This isn't the first royal-themed flight that Amal has done. Back in October 2022, she did a similar flight of creating the world's largest portrait of the Queen on a two-hour flight for charity following her passing last year.
The flight covered 65 miles tall and 39 miles wide, which showed an incredible look at the Queen with her crown on.
Do you want to track Amal's flight from the Coronation? Click here for all of the information, courtesy of RadarBox.com!
Follow us on Twitter for more updates on #aviation, #airlines, #airports, and more! Twitter.com/RadarBoxCom
READ NEXT...
- 76905
Tracking Helicopters With RadarBox
Today we'll explore how to filter and track helicopters on RadarBox.com. Read this blog post to learn more... - 30235
AirNav Announces Coronavirus Related Data & Graphics Available
AirNav Systems is providing data COVID-19 air traffic related data for analysis, study and use. - 21384
Replay Past Flights with Playback
AirNav RadarBox officially launches the playback function on RadarBox.com, allowing users to replay the air traffic for a specific date and time in the past, within a 365-day period. Read our blog post to learn more about this feature.