The impressive images of the stratosphere that Colombian Faber Burgos captured with a paper airplane

The landscapes of the land of coffee and brandy were captured in a video that is already viral on social networks and was disseminated by the engineering professional

The followers of Colombian engineer Faber Burgos once again delighted with the images of the globe he showed them through his social networks. The funny thing about this case is that the man used a balloon, an icopor box and a paper airplane to launch into space and show people the sky.

Burgos sent the weather plane from his home in his native Colombia and brought smiles and reactions to his fans on social networks, who got a glimpse of the wonders that hide the country's skies.

From the stratosphere, we were able to see the landscapes and several of the ecosystems that the national territory has. On the trip of the balloon, the photo of the dog Apollo traveled and, with the help of a USB stick and the elements described above, netizens were amazed to see these scenes.

“What you'll see in the next few minutes will be one of the most beautiful things you've ever seen,” said the engineer in the video that lasts more than 22 minutes and was broadcast on his Facebook account, where he has more than 42,000 followers.

The images that the engineer showed stole the sighs of the viewers and decided to spread the video, to the point that it is already viral on different social networks. One of the landscapes that man showed was the Sierra Nevada del Cocuy and one of its iconic landscapes, that of Ritacuba.

When the engineer's invention reached one of the highest areas of the Colombian sky, he said some emotional words in which he told how he felt when he saw his plane reach places that only planes and NASA have been able to reach.

“At this point we don't hear our differences, there are no egos, we don't hear our conflicts, there is no indifference, no bullets or even less our problems, there is only silence,” said the young man, recognized on social networks for his contents of science, atoms and the like.

When the balloon landed, the young man said that he had to do a whole series of maromas to recover the film material he captured on his social networks. His team had logistics to retrieve the video.

In fact, after the flying apparatus came down from the skies, it reached the municipality of Capitanejo in the department of Santander, more than three hours from the place where the maneuver began.

This is not the first time that Faber has performed this type of procedure. In fact, the first time he did it earned him a a href="https://www.infobae.com/america/colombia/2021/09/22/record-guinness-para-colombiano-que-grabo-la-tierra-desde-la-estratosfera/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank"bGuiness World Records, after he tied a camera to a helium balloon, and managed to get his artifact into the stratosphere, which allowed him to take a video of the way the earth looks from there. The Colombian, who had to request the respective permits from the Civil Aeronautics to carry out his experiment, became famous for these maneuvers.

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