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To: Libloather

Cool post! Pretty wild. Something I would have never considered probably in my life time.

Does space smell?


16 posted on 02/03/2024 6:03:30 AM PST by Openurmind (The ultimate test of a moral society is the kind of world it leaves to its children. ~ D. Bonhoeffer)
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To: Openurmind; Libloather; Adder; Sirius Lee; fella; equaviator; Jan_Sobieski; weezel; vespa300; ...
When I think about farts in space (okay, not often, unless I see a movie like "Rocket Man" which is not a great movie, but kids love it) and this one scene even made me laugh:


LINK:"Rocket Man"-Farting in Space Suits connected by emergency breathing tube!

When I went out to Oshkosh in July 1994, it was the 25th Anniversary of the Moon Landing. In a large outdoor pavilion close to the runway that seats 3500 people (I had no idea) they set a record for attendance at an Apollo 11 anniversary event that year that had 10,000 people attend the pavilion event. (They had about 2.5 million people visit Oshkosh that week for the aviation oriented event, IIRC)

I must say, I had no conception there were that many people (7.500 sitting out on the grass around the pavilion) as my buddy and I showed up early and got great seats inside about halfway to the stage. It was a beautiful summer night, and the pavilion was open on all sides.

There were 15 of the Apollo astronauts there including the entire Apollo 11 crew (an apparent rarity, since Neil Armstrong apparently didn’t do many appearances) and for several hours, they all sat on the stage at the front, getting up in front of the microphone, and spinning yarns…it was amazing! Totally unfiltered, almost as if you were in a small room, just you and them, having a beer!

They told stories about Gemini and Apollo, one stuck out, Jim Lovell (I think) spoke about spending time in the cramped Gemini capsule with Frank Borman, who had a legendary gas problem! There was a lot of laughing there! It was apparent that Borman was bearing the ribbing in good humor as best he could, and the other astronauts were grinning and laughing raucously!

But the one thing that stayed in my memory after all these years…the sun had gone down, it was dark out, and the astronauts were taking turns telling stories, and right in the middle of one astronaut (I can’t remember who it was) telling his tale, there came a great roar behind us, being close to the runway as the picture below shows (red arrow-I “think” that is the pavilion)

(I Photoshopped a Concorde on the runway so you get an idea how close we were)

Every single person in that crowd turned in unison, to see a Concorde SST taking off in full afterburner on the darkened runway, all four engines screaming in an ear-splitting roar, spitting out huge tongues of bright blue flame what seemed hundreds of feet behind the plane speeding down the runway!

Everyone completely ignored this astronaut up on the stage who was in the middle of some story, but instead of him being put out about it, he could be heard to encourage the audience to turn around and watch: “Go ahead and watch! We are aviation enthusiasts up here too, and all of us are watching too!”

There was something just beautiful about that. These were men who had made a living flying planes, had gone to the moon, but in the end…they were just like us, like a kid in a back yard watching with upturned eyes, some Piper Cub or jet airliner flying over! How I love that memory!

18 posted on 02/03/2024 6:36:04 AM PST by rlmorel ("The stigma for being wrong is gone, as long as you're wrong for the right side." (Clarice Feldman))
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