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So is NASA in Houston.
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Same — senior year and it was Regents week for NY high schools. I didn't have any tests that day, I was home and being lazy.
My oldest started an aerospace job at Cape Canaveral in Nov. so we went down to spend Christmas with him this year. Went to the Kennedy Space Center and saw one of the Space Shuttles (Discovery?) and it was awesome to see in total, up close and personal. There was no separate escape pod available. Kennedy is a little unknown gem of a visit, especially if you're a space nerd.
Atlantis. And NASA does a spectacular job of presenting it. You watch this excellent video, they roll open the doors and there it is, right in front of you, still roughed up from entering the atmosphere during its last mission. I was very glad my parents were with us to see it.
It's really not much bigger than a Clash A motorhome with wings.
If you've never visited KSC, it's worth it. The VAB. The Saturn V rocket on its side. The bus tour out to the launch sites. And the Visitor Center is jam-packed with great stuff.
My personal favorite -- which they may not do any longer -- was the excursion to the original Mercury pad and launch control. There were walls of badge and pins from every manned and unmanned support crew dating back to the early '50s. Dad has his RCA badges somewhere.
Having a KSC credential (and the ability to get one from the Air Force for Cape Canaveral) gave me a lot of opportunity to explore places not on the beaten path. There are still WWII hangars from before NACA in some places.
But the time KSC PA took a group of us out to Pad 34, where everything but the gantry tower has been designated to "abandon in place." Looking up through that huge circle in a square slab of concrete and seeing the moon was eerie as hell.
It feels very much like a graveyard.
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If you can tear the family away from Orlandoland for one day, the Kennedy Space Center is darn interesting, especially if you're at all interested in history and the future of space travel.
I'm not technically a "Canaveral kid" because I only went to kindergarten in Brevard before Dad got the job in Houston, but Mom and I watched all six Mercury missions from the front yard of the house in Indian Harbour Beach. And my parents moved back to the Space Coast the year after Gwen and I got married, and now live less than a half-mile from the original house, although we're trying to get 87 and 86 year old people to think about independent living. So my connection to that piece of land between the Banana River and the ocean (what we would call Beachside) is strong.
I basically landed the job at WMEL because I already had extensive knowledge of the space program. Too bad it didn't really come in handy after Jan. 28, 1986. Plus, the lure of covering sports was still a siren call.
Mom loves to mention she stood behind John Glenn and his wife in line at the Sears store in Cocoa a few months before he became world famous. They were buying a mop. The astronauts were poor military guys before they were "spam in a can." They'd each get a parade in downtown Cocoa Beach after their launches, with perhaps a couple thousand people in attendance!
My oldest started an aerospace job at Cape Canaveral in Nov. so we went down to spend Christmas with him this year. Went to the Kennedy Space Center and saw one of the Space Shuttles (Discovery?) and it was awesome to see in total, up close and personal. There was no separate escape pod available. Kennedy is a little unknown gem of a visit, especially if you're a space nerd.
I'm not technically a "Canaveral kid" because I only went to kindergarten in Brevard before Dad got the job in Houston, but Mom and I watched all six Mercury missions from the front yard of the house in Indian Harbour Beach.
If you can tear the family away from Orlandoland for one day, the Kennedy Space Center is darn interesting, especially if you're at all interested in history and the future of space travel.
I'm not technically a "Canaveral kid" because I only went to kindergarten in Brevard before Dad got the job in Houston, but Mom and I watched all six Mercury missions from the front yard of the house in Indian Harbour Beach. And my parents moved back to the Space Coast the year after Gwen and I got married, and now live less than a half-mile from the original house, although we're trying to get 87 and 86 year old people to think about independent living. So my connection to that piece of land between the Banana River and the ocean (what we would call Beachside) is strong.
I basically landed the job at WMEL because I already had extensive knowledge of the space program. Too bad it didn't really come in handy after Jan. 28, 1986. Plus, the lure of covering sports was still a siren call.
Mom loves to mention she stood behind John Glenn and his wife in line at the Sears store in Cocoa a few months before he became world famous. They were buying a mop. The astronauts were poor military guys before they were "spam in a can." They'd each get a parade in downtown Cocoa Beach after their launches, with perhaps a couple thousand people in attendance!
Man Cocoa Beach is gorgeous; what's funny is Space Coast is much smaller than I thought, population wise.If you can tear the family away from Orlandoland for one day, the Kennedy Space Center is darn interesting, especially if you're at all interested in history and the future of space travel.
I'm not technically a "Canaveral kid" because I only went to kindergarten in Brevard before Dad got the job in Houston, but Mom and I watched all six Mercury missions from the front yard of the house in Indian Harbour Beach. And my parents moved back to the Space Coast the year after Gwen and I got married, and now live less than a half-mile from the original house, although we're trying to get 87 and 86 year old people to think about independent living. So my connection to that piece of land between the Banana River and the ocean (what we would call Beachside) is strong.
I basically landed the job at WMEL because I already had extensive knowledge of the space program. Too bad it didn't really come in handy after Jan. 28, 1986. Plus, the lure of covering sports was still a siren call.
Mom loves to mention she stood behind John Glenn and his wife in line at the Sears store in Cocoa a few months before he became world famous. They were buying a mop. The astronauts were poor military guys before they were "spam in a can." They'd each get a parade in downtown Cocoa Beach after their launches, with perhaps a couple thousand people in attendance!