Teen pilot Zara Rutherford avoids typhoons, wildfires, missiles in solo flight around the world
- Bad weather prompted her to consider flying into North Korean airspace to get to Seoul, but her control team quickly dissuaded her from the idea
- Ahead of her final touchdown on Monday, the 19-year-old said she wanted to infuse young women and girls worldwide with the spirit of aviation

Avoid typhoon in the Philippines. Check. Steer clear of massive California wildfires. Check.
Keep away from test missiles in North Korea. What? Wait.
As teenage pilot Zara Rutherford flew ever onwards in a record-challenging global odyssey, she met little as strange or scary as when she tried to squeeze in between North Korean airspace and a massive cloud threatening to cut off passage for her ultralight plane.
“They test missiles once in a while without warning,” Rutherford said. More importantly, she was just 15 minutes from flying over one of the last places one should enter uninvited.
So she radioed her control team to ask if she could cut the corner over the isolationist communist dictatorship to get to Seoul. “Straight away they said: ‘Whatever you do, do not go into North Korean airspace!’”