The top stories on CBS4.com
Nov 26, 2009 10:51 am US/Eastern
Astronauts Get Suprise Feast Before Florida Return
CAPE CANAVERAL (CBS4) ―
-
-
Astronauts from the Atlantis shuttle are seen Nov. 19, on a spacewalk at the International Space Station. It's suspected station officials helped spirit turkey dinners aboard for the Shuttle crew.
AP
Space shuttle Atlantis' astronauts thought they were going to give thanks with pantry leftovers Thursday as their mission drew to a close, but found turkey dinners awaiting them.
The meal switch was revealed Thursday morning when a TV interviewer brought up the absence of turkey dinners aboard Atlantis. "That's not going to be on your menu today, is it?" the interviewer asked.
"Shockingly, yes, I think it will be," commander Charles Hobaugh said as some of his crew members grabbed the still unopened pouches of turkey and trimmings, and let them float around.
Hobaugh, a no-nonsense Marine, had made it clear before the 11-day flight that he did not care what he ate on the holiday, be it beef brisket or tofu. He made no special meal requests, meaning his crew was facing a standard disk like Turkey Tettrazini if they wanted fowl on the holiday.
But somehow turkey ended up on Atlantis smoked and irradiated along with pouches of candied yams and freeze-dried cornbread stuffing and green beans just add water and bon appetit.
A NASA spokesman, John Ira Petty, said "the only conceivable thing" that could have happened is that the crew of the International Space Station sneaked the meals into the shuttle before it departed Wednesday.
"Thanksgiving to me has not always been about the food you eat, but the company you keep, and I'm keeping some outstanding company here," Hobaugh said Thursday.
Hobaugh said he can't wait to get home and share a late Thanksgiving meal with his family. "But in the meantime, I've got a great group of friends and I'm really thankful for that," he said.
Weeks if not months ago, NASA had stocked the space station with turkey dinners and all the trimmings, knowing there would be at least one American in orbit over the holiday. Jeffrey Williams is the lone U.S. resident, sharing the outpost with two Russians, one Belgian and one Canadian.
Williams the station's new skipper was likely responsible for the Thanksgiving surprise. It wasn't known, on Earth anyway, whether any of the shuttle astronauts were in on it.
Hobaugh and his crew spent most of Thanksgiving getting ready for Friday's landing at the Kennedy Space Center landing strip. The pilots checked Atlantis' flight systems and reviewed their procedures. Good landing weather was forecast for the scheduled 9:44 a.m. touchdown.
Atlantis is coming back with an empty payload bay after delivering nearly 15 tons of pumps, storage tanks and other big spare parts to the space station, enough to keep the complex running for another five to 10 years. NASA wants the station well stocked so it can function long after the shuttles are retired next fall.
Returning from a three-month space station mission is Nicole Stott. She's already put in a request for a slice of New York-style pizza and some Coca-Cola with crushed ice in a plastic foam cup.
Astronaut Randolph Bresnik has been off the planet just 1½ weeks, but he missed his daughter's birth. Abigail Mae Bresnik was born Saturday night, just hours after his first spacewalk.
Bresnik said Thursday that he's thankful, this Thanksgiving, for his healthy daughter.
"Fortunately, she is just as beautiful as her mother," he said. "I always said, if our daughter got her looks and her brains, we'd be OK."
___
On the Net:
NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission(underscore)pages/shuttle/news/index.html
(© 2010 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
Comments