p51
One Too Many
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- Well behind the front lines!
Sorry that this doesn't really click with the golden era, I just thought some of you might like this anyway...
The years forever fashion new dreams when old ones go. God pity a one-dream man.”
-Robert Goddard
In 1982, I first heard of Space Camp. I was 12 then and there was no way I was ever going to get to go at such an early age. I dreamed of going, saw the movie in the 80s and dreamed even more. As the years went by, I kept thinking of the place but gave up on ever getting to go. A couple of years ago I found out they have had adult programs for many years, much to my surprise. Then last year, at a visit to Kennedy Space Center which seriously re-kindled my interest in the space program, I decided I really wanted to go. My wife and I were going to be in the south the following fall at that time and I asked my wife what she thought. Bless her, she replied that it sounded like a cool idea.
So, several months after that, I'm still reeling over the experience of finally getting to go to space camp.
THE TRIP
I started off in Atlanta and drove to Chattanooga for other reasons before leaving for Huntsville. After looking at other museums in the area, I found myself at the Marshall Space Center visitor center gift shop an hour before it closed. It was amazing to see the 100% size mockup of a Saturn V rocket in the distance as I came over the rise on highway 525. I bought just a few items (the first of many) and decided to chill on that until camp started. I stayed in the Marriott next door as there's really nothing else around the area of Space Camp. Looking across the fence at Habitat One (called, "The HAB" by everyone there), I could hardly wait until the next day. Like many people, the movie, "Spacecamp" (one word) stuck out for me and I clearly recalled the scene where Tate Donovan parks in Tom Skerritt's parking space. Today, that's not a parking space and it's right at the steps from the side facing the highway to the gift shop and a A-12 (that's not a SR-71) sits there. Well, there was just enough room to squeeze past the Blackbird and park in "Zach Bergstrom"'s parking space anyway! The funny thing is that the movie suggests there's an open field if you turn around, when in fact highway 525 is right behind you. That's Hollywood for you, I guess. These days, people don't bring up the failed 1986 movie very much because you have to be my age to have seen it as a kid. They had just wrapped on a modern Space Camp movie right before I arrived, but more on that later.
Right after the trip down movie memory lane, I broke out my tripod and got a night photo of the Saturn Vs at the facility.
The years forever fashion new dreams when old ones go. God pity a one-dream man.”
-Robert Goddard
In 1982, I first heard of Space Camp. I was 12 then and there was no way I was ever going to get to go at such an early age. I dreamed of going, saw the movie in the 80s and dreamed even more. As the years went by, I kept thinking of the place but gave up on ever getting to go. A couple of years ago I found out they have had adult programs for many years, much to my surprise. Then last year, at a visit to Kennedy Space Center which seriously re-kindled my interest in the space program, I decided I really wanted to go. My wife and I were going to be in the south the following fall at that time and I asked my wife what she thought. Bless her, she replied that it sounded like a cool idea.
So, several months after that, I'm still reeling over the experience of finally getting to go to space camp.
THE TRIP
I started off in Atlanta and drove to Chattanooga for other reasons before leaving for Huntsville. After looking at other museums in the area, I found myself at the Marshall Space Center visitor center gift shop an hour before it closed. It was amazing to see the 100% size mockup of a Saturn V rocket in the distance as I came over the rise on highway 525. I bought just a few items (the first of many) and decided to chill on that until camp started. I stayed in the Marriott next door as there's really nothing else around the area of Space Camp. Looking across the fence at Habitat One (called, "The HAB" by everyone there), I could hardly wait until the next day. Like many people, the movie, "Spacecamp" (one word) stuck out for me and I clearly recalled the scene where Tate Donovan parks in Tom Skerritt's parking space. Today, that's not a parking space and it's right at the steps from the side facing the highway to the gift shop and a A-12 (that's not a SR-71) sits there. Well, there was just enough room to squeeze past the Blackbird and park in "Zach Bergstrom"'s parking space anyway! The funny thing is that the movie suggests there's an open field if you turn around, when in fact highway 525 is right behind you. That's Hollywood for you, I guess. These days, people don't bring up the failed 1986 movie very much because you have to be my age to have seen it as a kid. They had just wrapped on a modern Space Camp movie right before I arrived, but more on that later.
Right after the trip down movie memory lane, I broke out my tripod and got a night photo of the Saturn Vs at the facility.