Canadian rocketeers hoping
to launch a privately built spacecraft from the small Saskatchewan town of
Kindersley met with community officials Thursday, updating residents on the
mission's progress and reaffirming their intent to fly.
Dav1d [sic] Grossman,
ground operations team leader for the Toronto-based GoldenPalace.com/da Vinci
Project, updated residents and officials near his team's launch site this week
while coordinating recovery and emergency plans for an anticipated suborbital
launch two weeks overdue.
"Everybody here is still very enthusiastic," Grossman said
of Kindersley and its surrounding towns in a telephone interview. "We really
need their participation."
The da Vinci team, led by Toronto's Brian Feeney, originally
planned to launch its suborbital manned spacecraft Wild Fire Mark VI on Oct.
2, but the flight was put on an as-yet-indefinite hold.
"I would say that, just like they are, we are waiting for a
new launch date," Kindersley Town Administrator Kim Hauta said via telephone.
"We had a fairly decent plan in place for Oct. 2, and some of those things
won't happen now due to the change."
A cabaret and other community entertainment programs were
time sensitive and could not be put on hold without a definite launch date, he
added.
Feeney, who will pilot Wild Fire's initial flight, has told SPACE.com
his team remains determined to launch despite losing the $10 million Ansari X
Prize suborbital spaceflight competition. That contest, which challenged
teams to privately build a reusable, three-person suborbital spacecraft, was
won on Oct. 4 in Mojave, California by Burt Rutan and his
SpaceShipOne
launch vehicle.
But Feeney has also said
a final launch date won't be announced until the da Vinci team has completely
arrived in Kindersley, which is expected to be at least seven days before the
intended space shot.
Under the current flight plan, an unmanned helium balloon
will hoist Wild Fire into the Kindersley sky from the town's local airport,
carrying it into launch position at about 80,000 feet. There, the spacecraft's
tether will be released and its hybrid rocket engine ignited. The spacecraft
and Feeney should experience a few minutes of weightless before reentering the atmosphere
and parachuting back to Earth.
Two weeks after missing their first launch target, Grossman
said plans are still coming together for what is hoped to be the first manned
space launch in Canada but would not say if a specific date has been set. Over
the last few days he has met with police and emergency services personnel from
Kindersley, as well as from nearby Elrose - where Wild Fire is expected to land
under its flight plan - to discuss ground and safety operations.
"We've got a man in the capsule," Grossman said. "We want to
make sure Brian comes down safe and sound."
Meanwhile, Kindersley officials were encouraged by
Grossman's arrival and presentations to both residents and city officials. On
Oct. 14, Grossman gave the Kindersley Town Council a mission briefing and met
with about 50 townspeople during a public meeting a night earlier.
Hauta said Grossman's personal presence was a welcome sight
for a town that has been eagerly awaiting the Wild Fire launch. The town has
been given the nickname Cape Kindersley for the launch, and souvenir chairs and
other goods are already available from local vendors.
"The only
reservations we have is with the attendance level," said Kindersley Mayor
Michael Hankewich, adding the weather in Kindersley will only get colder and
could limit spectator turnout. "But our hopes are high and we're rooting for
the launch and for [Feeney] too."
"This is a big thing, not only for Kindersley but for
Saskatchewan too," Hankewich said.