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‘If the balloon pops, who cares?’ ‘Mad as a hatter’ centenarian fulfils hot air balloon ambition

No sweat  Chrissie Miller was as cool as a cucumber ahead of take-off.
No sweat Chrissie Miller was as cool as a cucumber ahead of take-off.

An intrepid 100-year-old woman has taken her first flight in a hot air balloon joking she “wanted to have a word with the man upstairs”.

Chrissie Miller was born in May 1915, when the First World War was in its second year and powered flight was in its infancy.

Chrissie, from Scotstounhill, Glasgow, had always wanted to take a ride in a hot air balloon and on Tuesday, bolstered by a dram of whisky and declaring “I’m as mad as a hatter”, she finally got her wish as a belated 100th birthday present.

She took off from near Auchterarder and spent time drifting across Strathearn. Staff at the Bield care home where Chrissie lives helped make the arrangements and even got one of her best pals, Betty McDonald, 89, to go along to wave her off.

She was given the free trip by Virgin Balloon Flights after staff at Bield’s Glasgow Flexicare service, started a wishing tree to help elderly clients to express themselves.

Chrissie said: “I’m as mad as a hatter. It was exciting when they told me I was going to go. I’m 100. It’s there, so go.

“It was the spirit of adventure, way, way up high.”

She added: “At my age if the balloon pops or whatever, who cares? I’m not scared. I’m not bothered. I’m going to have a word with the man upstairs.”

Dainty Chrissie had to be lifted into the giant wicker basket, and then waved to pals as the balloon took off.

Usually chatty, she looked close to tears as it rose 100ft above Perthshire, and she peeked out at the Ochil hills on her left.

The four-mile flight took just under an hour, and she waved at golfers on the Gleneagles course hundreds of feet below, before turning to her carer and saying: “It suits me. It’s smashing.”

Chrissie, who enjoyed a dram of whisky before takeoff, even recited Wordsworth.

Chrissie was treated to a second dram of whisky after landing in a farmer’s field and needing to have the basket tipped sideways to get her out.

Asked how she felt, she was speechless, instead beaming and giving two thumbs up.