So another of my boyhood heroes sadly departs. I was aged 16 at the time of the first moon landing and camping in Brittany. I couldn't believe that my father would arrange our first family holiday abroad to clash with such a momentous occasion - I was a complete space nut, and still am. Actually it worked out OK. It was a lovely warm evening and the campsite owner put a large TV outside which we could watch. Whilst I believe the BBC had James Burke commentating and he motor-mouthed over everything the astronauts and Houston were saying, the French guy just shut up as the lunar module descended through 20,000ft and we heard every word they said right down to touchdown - didn't need a commentator - and despite the large numbers of viewers clustered around the TV you could have heard a pin drop. The tension was unbelievable, made all the more so by the very creditable silence of the French commentary.
There can only ever be one man who could be the first to walk on another world and he's on a par with Yuri Gagarin. Sad that there are only 8 of the 12 men who walked on the moon still alive - Charles "Pete" Conrad, Alan Shepard and Jim Irwin have all passed away. Of the 8 remaining, the youngest is aged 76 so I guess that within 10 years they will all have gone.
In 1969 the talk was on the moon by 1969 and Mars by 1980, and 2001 - a Space Odyssey had a moon base and manned space craft out to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn - and that didn't seem far fetched at the time. If some one had told me in 1969 that over 40 years later we would not have returned to the moon, and have no plans to send anyone anywhere, and that the Americans would have, for all practical purposes, turned their backs on manned space flight I wouldn't have believed it.
There can only ever be one man who could be the first to walk on another world and he's on a par with Yuri Gagarin. Sad that there are only 8 of the 12 men who walked on the moon still alive - Charles "Pete" Conrad, Alan Shepard and Jim Irwin have all passed away. Of the 8 remaining, the youngest is aged 76 so I guess that within 10 years they will all have gone.
In 1969 the talk was on the moon by 1969 and Mars by 1980, and 2001 - a Space Odyssey had a moon base and manned space craft out to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn - and that didn't seem far fetched at the time. If some one had told me in 1969 that over 40 years later we would not have returned to the moon, and have no plans to send anyone anywhere, and that the Americans would have, for all practical purposes, turned their backs on manned space flight I wouldn't have believed it.