That was almost true.
We hurried down to Titusville to be there for the launch on the 4th. En route I searched the internet for any NASA, USCG, East Coasts Alerts, DNR restricted zones. We didn't want to repeat the delay of the Wallops Island launch in Oct. Nothing. I called two different USCG sectors. They didn't know about a launch but said if there was a restricted zone it would be offshore and not on the ICW. I knew there was a launch and tried to find info. I could see why the person in VA sailed into trouble.
We got a mooring ball from the Titusville Muni Marina. The best (fastest, cheapest, 4 W, 4 D) laundry around. A bit tired but they had clean showers, a little store, great wifi in the mooring field, several TV channels, screened in "captains' lounge" with TV, fuel, water, pumpout. But back to the launch.
The Mission:
The December flight test will send the uncrewed Orion spacecraft 3,600 miles from Earth on a two-orbit flight to test critical systems for the challenges of deep space missions.
During the 4.5-hour flight, Orion will travel farther than any crewed spacecraft has gone in more than 40 years, before reentering Earth’s atmosphere at speeds near 20,000 mph and generating temperatures up to 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Orion will land in the Pacific Ocean where the U.S. Navy and NASA’s Ground Systems Development and Operations Program will recover the spacecraft.
The Orion Flight Test will evaluate launch and high speed re-entry systems such as avionics, attitude control, parachutes and the heat shield. In the future, Orion will launch on NASA’s new heavy-lift rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS). More powerful than any rocket ever built, SLS will be capable of sending humans to deep space destinations such as an asteroid and eventually Mars.
The launch was scheduled for 07:04. The first delay came because of a boat in the offshore restricted zone. Surprise. Then wind exceeding the parameters. Then some valves wouldn't close. The mission was scrubbed and rescheduled for the 5th.
That evening there was a beautiful full rainbow and the right end fell on Pad 37! A good omen!
Friday morning was cloudy but the wind was ok. We were "Go For Launch." This was not Jo's first launch as she used to live in Cocoa Beach and her favorite part is, what she calls, the "Go Fors." All the different system commanders in Houston are polled:
Communications? Go!,
Fuel? Go!,
SLS? Go!, etc.
Once everyone gives a "GO" the launch can proceed. Gives Jo goose bumps.
On the second try: LIFTOFF! We could see the flames and finally the ROAR reached us! It was soooo loud, even in Titusville. Once the rocket went into the clouds we ran inside to watch on TV. On the Space Coast, the local TV stations break into shows to cover launches completely. There are cameras on the rocket so you can watch as the different stages fall away.
An amazing first launch for Mark.