Feature What is your favourite space memory?

MMohammed

Community Manager
Oct 10, 2019
80
207
1,910
Visit site
I've got so many moments I can point to that featured something about space absolutely blowing me away. However, my favourite absolutely has to be my trip to the Kennedy Space Centre when I was a child. The thing I cannot forget was staring at the life-size model of the Explorer. I'd watched so many of these things take off on TV and just being in the presence of a MODEL stupefied me. Those things are massive!

1200px-Space_Shuttle_Explorer.jpg

Sadly, I didn't take this picture (can't find any photos from that time!). Thanks Wikipedia!

How about you? I'm curious what the rest of the community's favourite space memory is! :D
 
Dec 23, 2019
16
7
515
Visit site
Watching a night time shuttle launch when I was in Grad school - from my front yard in St Petersburg. This was pre-Challenger. A glorious climbing torch of light.
 

Wolfshadw

Moderator
I'd say my favorite space memory was the US Return to Space following the Challenger accident.

I remember exactly where I was when Discovery lifted off on the 29th of Sept, 1988. I had joined the Air Force a year earlier. I was in my office with most of my entire squadron gathered around a 6" portable TV screen, watching the launch. My heart was racing as Discovery lifted off and it all but stopped when I heard the five scariest words I've ever heard: "Discovery. Go with throttle up." 30 seconds later, my eyes were full of tears and I had a fist raised in triumph.

-Wolf sends

(Yes, I copy/pasted from an earlier thread).
 
Jan 11, 2020
62
11
1,535
Visit site
Going down to Florida as a kid, about five years before the first Shuttle launch. It was soon after the Soyuz-Apollo docking and I got a big medal souvenir medallion/coin commentating it. I actually got quite a bit of swag on my dad’s dime :).
Those were great days, I miss my mom and dad.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Lena
Feb 24, 2021
4
4
10
Visit site
A chegada do homem à Lua em 1969. Eu tinha 11 anos de idade e assisti pela televisão, aqui no Brasil
The Moon landing in 1969. I was 11 years old and watched by television, here in Brazil.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: rajib682
Feb 24, 2021
2
1
10
Visit site
Do my visits to the Kennedy Space Center get to count as space memories? I loved seeing all the building and places where so much history launched from and took place! And seeing the buildings and craft up close! Also the 2002 Leonid Meteor shower given its amazing show like fireworks, all night in the dark mesmerized. And the moment I saw my first total solar eclipse, and being at such a loss for words at the emotions I felt that all I could do was cry at seeing something words could not describe.
 
  • Like
Reactions: GeoXXX
Feb 25, 2021
1
2
10
Visit site
My favorite space memory would have to be the first trip to the moon. It was a leap ahead for mankind and opened up infinite possibilities. It opens up questions of the possibility of other inhabitable planets and other lifeforms. The stars have always fascinated me.
 
Jul 25, 2020
5
2
15
Visit site
1962 John Glenn became the first American to orbit the earth. That was the greatest thing America has achieved in my lifetime, in my opinion. For that brief moment in time America was one "American" People full of love and pride in what the collective WE had achieved. We knew n that moment there was no limit to what America would achieve.
 
Feb 24, 2021
2
1
15
Visit site
Before my time but still a favorite space moment/memory is when we beat the USSR to the moon. I am also proud of my fellow Buckeyes (Ohioans) Neil Armstrong and John Glenn if only I could be as great and to be respected and remembered as they are and will be.
 
Aug 29, 2020
19
11
515
Visit site
As a Design Engr at RocketDyne's Santa Susana Propulsion Field Lab in 1964 I was tasked w/design of an IMPULSE Load Cell to be used to CALIBRATE Thrusters for Moon Lander so Astronauts could "Dock-In-Space" or else NO ONE was going to Moon b/c to come back req'd a DOCK w/return S/C so why go?
When we were successful in calibrating a thruster so it could be precisely controlled, the "Proof of the Pudding" was 1965 Gemini project when Neil Armstrong became 1st astronaut to manually "Dock-in-Space" using thrusters we had calibrated w/my device, That was the moment when I first REALIZED, "Hey, it worked, we're going to the MOON" 4 yrs b/4 Neil landed on Moon
 
Last edited:
Feb 25, 2021
1
2
10
Visit site
I was born in 60 so I have a LOT of memories of the race to the moon. My first memory at this question was all the crappy astronaut food they sold. The tang was okay but they sold these pretty bad sticks shaped like slim Jim's but shorter. The peanut butter ones were horrible but we didn't care because we were eating like the astronauts!
 
Nov 19, 2019
13
2
515
Visit site
The 1989 Planetfest run by the Planetary Society in celebration of Voyager 2s flyby of Neptune and the end of it's planetary exploration. Festivities started in the Pasadena Civic Center auditorium with an introduction by Carl Sagan. What a treat it was to hear his mesmerizing voice and words inspire emotionally with the magnitude of the event. Next scientists from JPL lectured as Voyager closed in on Neptune. The following days consisted of the flyby and more lectures. There was an art show with fabulous pieces and the experience being with all those people with the same interest and excitement made a great time.
 

TRENDING THREADS

Latest posts