On July 21st, exactly 50 years ago, the first man walked on the Moon. A historic date that Richard Branson wishes to commemorate with the launch of the first Virgin Galactic space tourism shuttle, the SpaceShipTwo plane-rocket. In the race to conquer space, another American giant is close behind him: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos and his Blue Origin rocket, the New Shepard.
... and Boris Otter
Far from the fortune of the two billionaires, Boris Otter, a Geneva enthusiast of aviation and astronautics, is determined to raise the necessary funds to board one of the two spacecraft. After Claude Nicollier in 1992, he would become the second Swiss citizen to fly to the stars.
To finance his dream, the future space tourist had an unusual idea: to organize a competition offering tickets for space flight as the first prize.
Branson, Bezos ...
On July 21st, exactly 50 years ago, the first man walked on the Moon. A historic date that Richard Branson wishes to commemorate with the launch of the first Virgin Galactic space tourism shuttle, the SpaceShipTwo plane-rocket. In the race to conquer space, another American giant is close behind him: Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos and his Blue Origin rocket, the New Shepard.
... and Boris Otter
Far from the fortune of the two billionaires, Boris Otter, a Geneva enthusiast of aviation and astronautics, is determined to raise the necessary funds to board one of the two spacecraft. After Claude Nicollier in 1992, he would become the second Swiss citizen to fly to the stars.
To finance his dream, the future space tourist had an unusual idea: to organize a competition offering tickets for space flight as the first prize.
election mode
In order to select winners from the 20,000 members, the results of a quiz on the basis of 30 space-related questions, writing a personal motivational text of 15 lines, and confirmation of the absence of medical contra-indications will allow the Selection Committee to determine five winners of tickets for space flight. Boris Otter, meanwhile, de facto reserves the first seat for himself.
An enthusiast trained at Star City in Russia
A qualified airline pilot graduated from Swiss Aviation Training and currently a simulator pilot at Skyguide, Boris Otter had the chance to take part in three cosmonaut training modules at Star City, Moscow, from 2016. At this training center, where the greatest international cosmonauts are trained, he was tutored by the same instructors as Thomas Pesquet. "Many children dream of becoming a firefighter, pilot or cosmonaut. Me, I am lucky to be all three of them, or almost ... I only have one more step to go to the end of my dream: to observe the blue planet from space!"
To achieve this, Boris Otter has allowed himself one year to raise the necessary funds. The countdown has begun: fewer than 300 days remain for him to succeed in his challenge and share his childhood dream with 5 other enthusiasts. They, like him, have their heads in the stars.