Space Tourist Richard Garriott Launched on Space Station Vacation…
Written by Ian O'Neill
…but the station's toilet has broken down again.
For $30 million, you can get a ride into space for a 10-day trip on board the
International
Space Station. To Richard Garriott, this is money well-spent. He got to spend
months
training for the experience and he will use the adventure to carry out
experiments,
educational programs and to follow in his father's footsteps. 25-years earlier,
Owen
Garriott flew on Space Shuttle Columbia, and before that he served on Skylab.
Having
successfully launched on board the Soyuz launch vehicle on Sunday, Garriott Jr.
is keen to
make space travel a family affair, and make some history along the way; he is
the first
second-generation American astronaut ever to be launched into space. It sounds
like an
exciting few days await the 47 year old computer video game entrepreneur…
But like any positive story, there's a flip-side. The International Space
Station, far from
being The Ritz at the best of times, has been inflicted with a rather annoying
inconvenience… the main toilet is out of order, requiring all on board to use
the Soyuz en-
suite. Although it is doubtful Garriott will get a room credit for the
inconvenience, I'm sure
the view of the Earth rotating below, the excitement of being involved in the
biggest space
project ever conceived, and the joy of zero-G will more than make up for the
bathroom
situation…
At 3:01 AM EDT (0701 GMT) Sunday morning, Richard Garriott blasted off from the
Central
Asian spaceport of Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan aboard a Soyuz TMA-13
spacecraft. Expedition 18 is being used to ferry two new crewmembers to the ISS.
American astronaut Michael Fincke and Russian cosmonaut Yury Lonchakov will keep
Garriott company until tomorrow's (Tuesday) Soyuz docking with the station where
the
trio will join the existing ISS crewmembers Commander Sergei Volkov, Flight
Engineer
Oleg Kononenko and astronaut Gregory E. Chamitoff. Volkov and Kononenko will
accompany Garriott when he is scheduled to return back to Earth on October 23rd.
"Today, my dream of following in my father's footsteps to explore new frontiers
is being
realized," Garriott said in a statement shortly after launch in reference to his
father, 77
year-old retired NASA scientist-astronaut Owen Garriott. "It's with honour and
appreciation that I launch on my greatest adventure yet, and step into a role
assumed by
only five private individuals before me."