Windsor Star

Astronaut setting home life in order prior to mission

ISS trip in December will last six months

- Peter rakobowchu­k

MONTREAL • Canadian astronaut David SaintJacqu­es says the biggest part of his preparatio­n as he gets ready to leave Dec. 20 for a visit to the Internatio­nal Space Station is making sure his family is ready to deal with his six-month absence. “Two years out is too far to think about that, but a couple of months out you are starting to think: ’I’m actually leaving for a long time in a very faraway place,’ ” he said Thursday during a news conference at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.

“I better make sure that everything is in order in my life before I do that and my family is OK.” Saint-Jacques, who will turn 49 on the space station Jan. 6, is married to a medical doctor and is the father of three children — boys aged seven and five and a twoyear-old girl.

In a later interview, SaintJacqu­es said he’s impressed his children understand what’s going on. “We’ve spent a lot of time explaining to them at a level that they can grasp the fact that the Earth is a planet in space, that things are on orbit around it (and) that there’s this house in the sky where daddy is going to go,” he said. Saint-Jacques added his children have also spoken to people when they were on the space station.

“The other day I was driving past these big satellite dishes that we have on the Johnson Space Center and my five-year-old son pointed out that: ’Hey, that’s how we speak to your friends up in the sky,’ ” he said.

With less than three months to go before he heads into space, Saint-Jacques has finished learning the technical aspects of his training. “We know how to do our tasks, operate the machinery, space suits, the robotic Canadarm2 (and) the Soyuz,” he noted. Saint-Jacques said last week’s air leak at the Internatio­nal Space Station was like a wake-up call.

A top Russian space official says it was traced to a small hole in one of the Russian Soyuz capsules that was docked at the space station. The leak was patched over with a sealant that officials said was airtight. Saint-Jacques said the incident shows that all the training the astronauts go through is not a joke and it can actually come to be useful.

U.S. astronaut Anne McClain, who is also part of the December mission, told reporters that Roscosmos, the Russian Space Agency, has convened a state commission to look into the leak and that she had “100 per cent faith” in the commission. It’s been reported that according to a top Russian official the leak was a drill hole that happened during manufactur­ing or in orbit. Saint-Jacques said he and his two space colleagues are now entering the phase of learning about the science experiment­s they will be performing.

“We’re learning to become useful, if you want, to the scientists on the planet on Earth who have prepared all the experiment­s for us on board,” he said.

The three will blast off in a Soyuz spacecraft from the orbiting space laboratory in Kazakhstan. It will be the first space flight for both Saint-Jacques and McClain, while Kononenko will be making his fourth trip to the station. Saint-Jacques, the ninth Canadian to travel to space, will also serve as a co-pilot in the space capsule and, because of his medical training, will be the crew’s doctor on board the station during the six-month stay. Before joining the space program, he practised medicine in a remote Inuit community on Hudson Bay. The last Canadian to visit the orbiting space laboratory was Chris Hadfield, who completed his five-month stay in 2013.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? “Two years out is too far to think about that, but a couple of months out you are starting to think: ‘I’m actually leaving for a long time in a very faraway place,’ ” says Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques.
RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES “Two years out is too far to think about that, but a couple of months out you are starting to think: ‘I’m actually leaving for a long time in a very faraway place,’ ” says Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques.

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