On to day two. Paul (my carpool buddy) and I decided that to beat the traffic we would drive over to the Cape at around 3am. It worked, we beat the traffic but got there too early. The guard said, "you're not getting in until 5, u-turn and exit." We spent an hour in the media accreditation parking lot with a bunch of others going to the Tweetup. You could feel the nervous energy even sitting in the parking lot that early.
Once we parked the car in the VAB parking lot and walked to the press site (about a quarter mile) we were greeted with this sight. Truly spectacular especially when you think that in a few hours this serene scene will be one of fire and thunder.
An the morning progressed things got busier around the press site. There was an electric feeling in the air. Our Tweetup host said that this was the most media they had registered since the John Glenn flight in the mid 90's
The previous day NASA had forecast only a 30% chance of weather being favorable for launch so we were all keeping our fingers crossed that the clouds would hold off. As the clocked ticked down towards launch time my anxiety seemed to be going the opposite direction.
There were even a few celebrities around to watch the launch. Seth Green talked to us about supporting NASA and was nice enough to take pictures with whoever wanted. Bob Crippen (the pilot on STS-1) and Tony Antonelli (a veteran of 2 shuttle flights) came to the tent to talk to us. Tony Antonelli was a great speaker and very funny. Bob Crippen told us that his only thought while he was sitting in the Shuttle on the first ever launch was, "God, please don't let me screw up." Around 9:00 an officer from the 45th weather squadron gave us a weather brief. Things were still not looking too good. Even though it was nice out they were still expecting clouds to move in by launch time.
This picture was taken around 8am as the astronauts drove to the pad. It was quite fun watching the convoy escorted by a helicopter with snipers hanging out the door drive by. These were the kind of things that made it feel like I was not just watching a launch but a part of it all. As the minutes ticked down were all amazed that the weather seemed to be holding out. At about T-30 minutes I started to feel like this might actually happen! We could hear the NASA weather briefings to launch control and the weather was mostly green but every now and then it would go red for cloud cover and you could hear a collective groan. At T-9 minutes the launch director took his final poll. When the weather officer said we are go a huge cheer erupted. The excitement went up another notch. Everyone found a place along the water to watch and photograph. At T-1 minute I'm thinking this is it, I'm going to see it go today! Then I heard something that made my heart drop, hold for a failure at T-31 seconds. The launch window was only open for 5 minutes so whatever it was they had to figure it out quickly. Minutes ticked by then over the scanner I heard launch control tell the astronauts to close and lock visors and initiate o2 flow. I knew we were back in business. Turns out it was a faulty sensor on the gaseous oxygen vent hood that retracts before launch. It had to be visually cleared then the count resumed. When the call, "we have main engine start" went out I took a second and thought to myself, " this is actually going to happen."
And this is what happened. Liftoff of Atlantis! It seemed to jump into the air and head down range. The sound didn't reach us for several seconds. First the main engine sound hit. It was a far off sounding rumble but when the SRB noise hit, it about knocked me over. A deep pulsating rumble washed over us unlike anything i have experienced. Almost like Atlantis was trying to rip the sky apart. The first picture was the only decent close up i captured. After that I was shaking so much I couldn't hold the camera steady.
So I panned out and took a few shots. This is about how it looked to us. Atlantis kept picking up speed and before I knew it she disappeared into the clouds.
An the morning progressed things got busier around the press site. There was an electric feeling in the air. Our Tweetup host said that this was the most media they had registered since the John Glenn flight in the mid 90's
The previous day NASA had forecast only a 30% chance of weather being favorable for launch so we were all keeping our fingers crossed that the clouds would hold off. As the clocked ticked down towards launch time my anxiety seemed to be going the opposite direction.
There were even a few celebrities around to watch the launch. Seth Green talked to us about supporting NASA and was nice enough to take pictures with whoever wanted. Bob Crippen (the pilot on STS-1) and Tony Antonelli (a veteran of 2 shuttle flights) came to the tent to talk to us. Tony Antonelli was a great speaker and very funny. Bob Crippen told us that his only thought while he was sitting in the Shuttle on the first ever launch was, "God, please don't let me screw up." Around 9:00 an officer from the 45th weather squadron gave us a weather brief. Things were still not looking too good. Even though it was nice out they were still expecting clouds to move in by launch time.
This picture was taken around 8am as the astronauts drove to the pad. It was quite fun watching the convoy escorted by a helicopter with snipers hanging out the door drive by. These were the kind of things that made it feel like I was not just watching a launch but a part of it all. As the minutes ticked down were all amazed that the weather seemed to be holding out. At about T-30 minutes I started to feel like this might actually happen! We could hear the NASA weather briefings to launch control and the weather was mostly green but every now and then it would go red for cloud cover and you could hear a collective groan. At T-9 minutes the launch director took his final poll. When the weather officer said we are go a huge cheer erupted. The excitement went up another notch. Everyone found a place along the water to watch and photograph. At T-1 minute I'm thinking this is it, I'm going to see it go today! Then I heard something that made my heart drop, hold for a failure at T-31 seconds. The launch window was only open for 5 minutes so whatever it was they had to figure it out quickly. Minutes ticked by then over the scanner I heard launch control tell the astronauts to close and lock visors and initiate o2 flow. I knew we were back in business. Turns out it was a faulty sensor on the gaseous oxygen vent hood that retracts before launch. It had to be visually cleared then the count resumed. When the call, "we have main engine start" went out I took a second and thought to myself, " this is actually going to happen."
And this is what happened. Liftoff of Atlantis! It seemed to jump into the air and head down range. The sound didn't reach us for several seconds. First the main engine sound hit. It was a far off sounding rumble but when the SRB noise hit, it about knocked me over. A deep pulsating rumble washed over us unlike anything i have experienced. Almost like Atlantis was trying to rip the sky apart. The first picture was the only decent close up i captured. After that I was shaking so much I couldn't hold the camera steady.
So I panned out and took a few shots. This is about how it looked to us. Atlantis kept picking up speed and before I knew it she disappeared into the clouds.
And that brings me to the end of my NASA Tweetup adventure. For one brief time I was in the middle of the action and it made me feel like I mattered. After the launch I even had KRTV calling me for an interview. A truly amazing couple of days that I will never forget. Thank you from the bottom of my heart NASA and the NASA tweetup team.
6 comments:
what other celebs where there?
Awesome stuff man. Wish I could of been there. Sign me up for the next tweet up! -Brady
Mostly just media types. I have some cool pictures of Anderson Cooper.
Jess, I enjoy reading your blogs. You descriptions are so good...can really the excitement. Glad you were able to experience it :)
Thanks so much for letting us share in the excitement Jess.
Dad and I will never forget the day we saw the Atlantis blast off.
We were nine miles further away than you, but it was still amazing.
What a wonderful experience.
Great post that is so cool that they let you see so much. Also super cool you got to meet Seth Green - ha ha. What a great experience and you were the perfect person for it!!
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