Astronaut David Saint-Jacques plays backup role
MONTREAL — Canada’s next man in space doesn’t have his official liftoff date until December, but David Saint-Jacques says he’s ready if called into action in the coming weeks.
Saint-Jacques, 48, is serving as a backup to European Space Agency astronaut Alexander Gerst, who is part of a threeperson team scheduled to launch from Kazakhstan on June 6.
Although a backup crew being pressed into duty on short notice has never happened, SaintJacques told The Canadian Press on Thursday he is currently relishing a dry run, experiencing all the intricacies of preparing for his stay aboard the International Space Station.
“For the last almost decade, I’ve been training in an adult version of space camp, it’s been PowerPoint and simulators and trainers,” he said from Kazakhstan.
“Now this is the real deal, and although I’ve been in the space program for a while, it’s the first time I go through the real deal: all the real preparation, the real spacecraft, the real spacesuit.”
The ninth Canadian to travel to space will serve as a co-pilot for the Soyuz capsule and crew medical officer on board the station. He will also be the “guinea pig” in numerous medically related experiments sponsored by Canada during his six-month stay.
An astronaut since 2009, SaintJacques was named to the mission in 2016 and said it’s mentally good to go through the motions before the real day.
For the next two weeks, he’ll be on standby with his fellow teammates — Russian Oleg Kononenko and American Anne McClain.
“If someone breaks their ankle or catches a bad disease a day or two before launch, there’s a nonzero chance I might go,” SaintJacques said. “This has never happened, not on short notice.”
The engineer and doctor will be the first Canadian to visit the station since Chris Hadfield was there in 2012 and 2013.