Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Canadian Astronaut Chris Hadfield Takes Charge Of International Space Station


BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan - Chris Hadfield has successfully blasted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on a mission that is to see him become the first Canadian to command the International Space Station.

Hadfield is travelling to the space station on board a Russian Soyuz capsule for a five-month visit to the giant orbiting space lab.

He is sharing the trip to the space station with NASA astronaut Tom Marshburn and Russian cosmonaut Roman Romanenko.

Governor-General David Johnston called Hadfield's launch "a great day for Canada, a great day for the world of discovery and innovation."


He joined the families of Canadian Space Agency employees at its headquarters south of Montreal to watch the event on a giant TV screen.

"We're so proud that Chris Hadfield now is up in space - the first Canadian to be commanding the space station in March," he said.

"And now we simply pray for a continued safe mission and a safe return."
During his stay, Hadfield, an avid guitar player, plans to do some strumming to help him deal with homesickness.


The 53-year-old space veteran will also be involved with more than 130 experiments including Micro-flow, a Canadian blood-sampling experiment which he compared to a hospital in a box.
During the second half of his mission, Hadfield will become the first Canadian to command the space station.

This is Hadfield's third space journey.

His first space trip was in November 1995 when he visited the Russian Space Station Mir. His second voyage was a visit to the International Space Station in April 2001, when he also performed two space walks.

Rookie astronaut David Saint-Jacques and former Canadian astronaut Bob Thirsk provided a running commentary of this morning's blastoff. Thirsk was the last Canadian in space and spent six months on board the space station in 2009.


Marc Garneau, who was the first Canadian to shuttle into outer space, said he's proud of Hadfield's accomplishments and wished him well.

"This is a first," he said Tuesday. "The first (Canadian) commander of the International Space Station."

"That's an incredible accomplishment. He's an incredible guy."
Garneau admits he'd like to be in space again.

"I'd love it, it's fun," he told The Canadian Press.

Garneau has moved on to more earthly challenges. The Liberal member of Parliament is running to become the federal party's next leader.

Today's launch was from Russia's manned space facility in the freezing steppes of Kazakhstan, where temperatures were at minus 30 degrees Celcius earlier this week.

This morning's launch marked a return to use of the launch pad known as Gagarin's Start, where Soviet astronaut Yuri Gagarin blasted off in 1961 for the first human orbital space flight. Another launch site was used for the previous mission, which set off in October.

The Soyuz craft Hadfield and his colleagues are travelling on is a variation on the vehicle that has been in constant use by the Soviet and then Russian manned space programs since 1967.
With the decommissioning of the U.S. shuttle fleet, the Soyuz is now the only vehicle able to carry astronauts to the space station.


Who would have ever thunk at the height of the Space Race that the Russians would be the only ones that could get a man into Space. That is why Hadfield is a braver man than me. Who takes off and lands in Khazakhstan?  In the freakin' winter? At least they used Gagarin's old launch pad for luck and it worked. Wave to Chris as he flies by.

He even is going to enjoy uniquely Canadian snacks during the five months.

During Expedition 34/35, Hadfield’s Canadian snacks will include candied wild smoked salmon, smoked salmon pate, cranberry buffalo stix, cereal, dried apple chunks, fruit bars, green tea cookies with orange zest, maple syrup cookies, organic chocolate, honey drops, chocolate bars and maple syrup.

Finally a Canadian in charge. You can bet that any alien shenanigans will be way down in the next five months because Hoser Hommie don't play that.

 

8 comments:

Budd said...

sent you an email at the yahoo address yesterday, wondering if you caught it.

Kal said...

Let me check.

david_b said...

Wow, 50yrs later...

A Canadian orbits the earth.

That should be the lead story everywhere.

Kal said...

At least we are there at all. What have your done for us lately?

david_b said...

Nothing, sir, just visit the moon several times, and left a plaque there honoring those who gallantly paid the ultimate sacrifice for us to reach it.

It's our president, our 'Man of the Year' who isn't pushing it, go ahead and ask him.

He's supposed to be in charge.

david_b said...

Waaait, SERIOUSLY..??

You.. asking.. what.. we've done lately..?

Only, along with the Soviets, INVENT ALL the technology to get you there while you were in diapers, sir.

We did it the correct way of course..:

STOLE it from Germany.

Kal said...

Just because your Germans were better than their Germans. LONG LIVE SPUTNIK AND YURI GAGARIN!!

Debra She Who Seeks said...

Go Chris go!