NASA's stuck astronauts hit 6 months in space. Just 2 more to go
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[December 06, 2024]
By MARCIA DUNN
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Known across the globe as the stuck
astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams hit the six-month mark in
space Thursday with two more to go.
The pair rocketed into orbit on June 5, the first to ride Boeing’s new
Starliner crew capsule on what was supposed to be a weeklong test
flight. They arrived at the International Space Station the next day,
only after overcoming a cascade of thruster failures and helium leaks.
NASA deemed the capsule too risky for a return flight, so it will be
February before their long and trying mission comes to a close.
While NASA managers bristle at calling them stuck or stranded, the two
retired Navy captains shrug off the description of their plight. They
insist they’re fine and accepting of their fate. Wilmore views it as a
detour of sorts: “We’re just on a different path.”
“I like everything about being up here,” Williams told students
Wednesday from an elementary school named for her in Needham,
Massachusetts, her hometown. "Just living in space is super fun.”
Both astronauts have lived up there before so they quickly became
full-fledged members of the crew, helping with science experiments and
chores like fixing a broken toilet, vacuuming the air vents and watering
the plants. Williams took over as station commander in September.
“Mindset does go a long way,” Wilmore said in response to a question
from Nashville first-graders in October. He’s from Mount Juliet,
Tennessee. “I don’t look at these situations in life as being downers.”
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2024/Dec/06/images/ads/current/merealty_sda_BASKETBALL_2024.png)
Boeing flew its Starliner capsule home empty in September, and NASA
moved Wilmore and Williams to a SpaceX flight not due back until late
February. Two other astronauts were bumped to make room and to keep to a
six-month schedule for crew rotations.
Like other station crews, Wilmore and Williams trained for spacewalks
and any unexpected situations that might arise.
“When the crews go up, they know they could be there for up to a year,”
said NASA Associate Administrator Jim Free.
NASA astronaut Frank Rubio found that out the hard way when the Russian
Space Agency had to rush up a replacement capsule for him and two
cosmonauts in 2023, pushing their six-month mission to just past a year.
Boeing said this week that input from Wilmore and Williams has been
“invaluable" in the ongoing inquiry of what went wrong. The company said
in a statement that it is preparing for Starliner's next flight but
declined comment on when it might launch again.
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![](../images/120624PIX/news_m3.jpg)
NASA astronauts Suni Williams, left, and Butch Wilmore stand
together for a photo enroute to the launch pad at Space Launch
Complex 41 Wednesday, June 5, 2024, in Cape Canaveral, Fla., for
their liftoff on the Boeing Starliner capsule to the international
space station. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, File)
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2024/Dec/06/images/ads/current/werth_lda_HFH_2024.png)
NASA also has high praise for the pair.
“Whether it was luck or whether it was selection, they were great
folks to have for this mission,” NASA's chief health and medical
officer, Dr. JD Polk, said during an interview with The Associated
Press.
On top of everything else, Williams, 59, has had to deal with
“rumors,” as she calls them, of serious weight loss. She insists her
weight is the same as it was on launch day, which Polk confirms.
During Wednesday's student chat, Williams said she didn't have much
of an appetite when she first arrived in space. But now she's “super
hungry” and eating three meals a day plus snacks, while logging the
required two hours of daily exercise.
Williams, a distance runner, uses the space station treadmill to
support races in her home state. She competed in Cape Cod’s 7-mile
Falmouth Road Race in August. She ran the 2007 Boston Marathon up
there as well.
She has a New England Patriots shirt with her for game days, as well
as a Red Sox spring training shirt.
“Hopefully I’ll be home before that happens -- but you never know,”
she said in November. Husband Michael Williams, a retired federal
marshal and former Navy aviator, is caring for their dogs back home
in Houston.
As for Wilmore, 61, he's missing his younger daughter's senior year
in high school and his older daughter's theater productions in
college.
“We can’t deny that being unexpectedly separated, especially during
the holidays when the entire family gets together, brings increased
yearnings to share the time and events together,” his wife, Deanna
Wilmore, told the AP in a text this week. Her husband “has it worse
than us” since he's confined to the space station and can only
connect via video for short periods.
“We are certainly looking forward to February!!” she wrote.
___
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