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  Astronauts share freeze-dried Thanksgiving feast
Last updated: 2008-11-27


Astronauts share freeze-dried Thanksgiving feast
2008-11-27

Category
Thanksgiving
International Space Station
Nations
U.S.
States
Florida
Category
Regions
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Gregory Chamitoff
Event
2008 Endeavour Mission 2
Profession
Astronauts
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Detroit Lions
Source
(AP)

HOUSTON - Astronauts raised plastic cups of iced tea and toasted the Thanksgiving holiday from the international space station Thursday.

"To Thanksgiving. Wishing everyone on Earth, and off Earth, a good Thanksgiving," said Endeavour astronaut Don Pettit, holding a makeshift plastic cup he had devised during his visit to the space station.

Astronauts normally drink liquids from pouches using straws, to prevent the drinks from spilling out, but Pettit wanted to show that they could drink from cups. Pettit also made an iced-tea toast to future space explorers and "just because we're in space and we can."

Like millions of Americans, the seven Endeavour astronauts and three space station crew members were enjoying a traditional Thanksgiving dinner Thursday of turkey, cornbread stuffing and green beans. But unlike families on Earth, they'll be floating -- not sitting down -- for their feast at the joined space shuttle-international space station complex, some 220 miles above.

"We generally spend it with family but for us today we have the opportunity to spend it with our once-removed family, our space family," shuttle commander Christopher Ferguson said in a message to Mission Control. "Please have a little bit of turkey for us."

It was going to be an early meal for the nine U.S. astronauts and single Russian cosmonaut, with the last candied yam likely eaten before the Detroit Lions score a touchdown.

The shuttle astronauts have to do some last-minute packing before they say goodbye to the station crew and close the hatch between Endeavour and the space station Thursday afternoon.

The space shuttle is set to undock from the space station early Friday and return to Florida on Sunday, completing a 16-day mission.

"It's going to be sad tomorrow to see our ... friends leave," station commander Mike Fincke said Wednesday night. "But it will be a happy Thanksgiving."

It is somewhat unusual for shuttle and station crews to eat a meal together, given their different schedules and various chores. The crew members will take several precautions for the meal -- keeping fire extinguishers and gas masks in the dining area, for instance.

"So, if anything happens when they're all sitting in one place, you don't have to run in all the wrong directions to grab all the equipment you need," said flight director Holly Ridings.

The astronauts also will be given time to talk to friends and relatives on the ground during their morning off-duty time.

Meanwhile, the mission's other tasks are winding down.

The shuttle and station crews finished their last major job Wednesday -- zipping up a huge space station crate and loading it back onto Endeavour.

Astronauts used the space station's robot arm to latch onto the giant canister that had held new equipment for the space station. Among the home improvement items delivered more than a week ago: a bathroom, kitchenette, two bedrooms, exercise equipment, and a system that purifies urine, sweat and condensation into drinking water. All is needed to double the space station's population to six next year.

Flight controllers had considered having the stubborn urine-recycling piece of the $154 million water system return to Earth. The urine processor had shut down during several days of test runs.

But after five days of tinkering, astronauts got the machine working, and it's since churned out seven liters of recycled urine and condensation for testing back on Earth. NASA wants to test the samples and run the equipment in orbit for at least three months before allowing anyone to drink the recycled stuff.

Astronaut Gregory Chamitoff, who has lived at the orbiting outpost for the past six months, spent his last night with space station colleagues. He is returning aboard Endeavour and is being replaced at the space station by astronaut Sandra Magnus.

"It's been one great adventure," Chamitoff radioed Mission Control. "I can't wait to see you all back on the ground."

___

On the Net:

NASA: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov

 2008 Endeavour Mission 2  
  Profile2 News22GalleryLinks  
  Endeavour to begin return trip to Fla. on Monday (2008-12-07)
  Space shuttle Endeavour finishes 16-day mission (2008-11-30)
  Bad weather delays Endeavour's landing (2008-11-30)
  'Space family' says goodbye as mission nears end (2008-11-28)
  Space shuttle Endeavour departs space station (2008-11-28)
  Astronauts share freeze-dried Thanksgiving feast (2008-11-27)
  Astronauts Offer Their Thanks, Giving Space on the Shuttle (2008-11-27)
  Astronauts busy collecting recycled urine samples (2008-11-26)
  Astronauts step out for final spacewalk of mission (2008-11-24)
  Endeavour astronauts conduct repairs on third spacewalk (2008-11-23)
  Astronauts try to work out kinks in urine machine (2008-11-23)
  Astronauts face hardest spacewalk to finish repair (2008-11-22)
  NASA marks 10th ISS anniversary with spacewalk (2008-11-20)
  Spacewalk to Mark Space Station's 10th Anniversary (2008-11-20)
  Astronauts end space walk marred by lost tool bag (2008-11-18)
  Astronauts hitch giant crate to space station (2008-11-17)
  Shuttle Endeavour links with space station (2008-11-16)
  Endeavour heading for space station rendezvous (2008-11-16)
  Shuttle Endeavour closes in for station linkup (2008-11-16)
  Astronauts inspect shuttle for any launch damage (2008-11-15)
  NASA clears shuttle Endeavour for Friday launch (2008-11-13)
  Space Shuttle Astronauts Ready to Fly (2008-11-13)
  22 (31244)


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