The buggy has been called "a mountain bike for wheelchair users"
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A Kent inventor has developed an all-terrain electric buggy aimed at giving disabled users the experience of going off-road through rough country.
Chris Swift was a student agricultural engineer when he was disabled by a neurological condition as a teenager.
He completed his degree, but realised his days of driving tractors were over.
He tried "all manner of devices" to get outdoors, but found nothing that was safe and easy off-road, and went on to devise the Boma buggy.
Mr Swift, from Thanet, teamed up with his university friends to design his product and went on to find a company to test and sell it.
He said the battery-powered Boma, which has been tested in the Alps and in Africa, uses mountain bike technology to give people "the ability to go anywhere".
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Don't think of it as a wheelchair - think of it as a four-wheel mountain bike
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"It rides the bumps very well and the terrain and just lets you have a bit of fun," he told BBC South East.
"The Boma is a mountain bike for wheelchair users, in the simplest terms.
"Don't think of it as a wheelchair - think of it as a four-wheel mountain bike."
Members of the Kent Outdoor Pursuits Disability Project put the buggy through its paces at Bedgebury Pinetum in Goudhurst.
Wheelchair user Lee Davies said: "What is does is open up the environment completely, and remove those natural barriers.
"Whereas with a wheelchair or a cycle, you're slightly restricted, this just means you can go anywhere that anyone else would go."