French start-up takes off with flight-sharing app
London : A French start-up is reaching for the skies with a flight-sharing app, matching pilots with passengers looking for a low-cost way to take off in a private aircraft.
"It's a great way to get on planes. It's quite a unique experience. It's something new," says Adam Nicholas, 27, at an airfield close to London.
He is readying for his second trip with Wingly, a French firm connecting passengers and pilots for short flights, and the undisputed market leader in Europe with a community of more than 80,000 members.
In Nicholas' first experience he took his girlfriend on a surprise day trip to Le Touquet, across the Channel in France.
"We flew there in the morning, had some lunch, had some wine and then flew back again in the evening," he says.
This time the Londoner will be flown by pilot Somasekhara Pemmiredy, 34, above the British capital aboard a Cessna 172 aircraft.
Pemmiredy has clocked up more than 290 hours since gaining his pilot's licence in 2011.
Working in security at a London airport during the evenings, he flies for Wingly in the daytime as a way to add more flight hours which are vital to achieving his ambition of working for an airline.
Pemmiredy describes the set-up as a "win-win situation", as he prepares an eager Nicholas with the details of the altitude, speed and flight path they are about to take.
But not before the pilot checks out another flight request on his phone, using the Wingly app which allows clients to contact pilots directly.
"A month ago, I received a request for a flight with one-hour notice and I managed to fly," says Pemmiredy.
"The guy was very lucky as it was my day off, so I could fly the couple to celebrate their anniversary in France."
After the technical checks have been meticulously carried out, Pemmiredy and his passenger board the small aircraft which is owned by a flying club.
The duo return an hour later after their flight over the city, both smiling.
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