Roman has a recording. Sunita's got her snapshots. And Bill has
his banner from up north.
The STS-116 crew, living aboard Discovery and docked
with the International
Space Station (ISS), has mementos and favorite items packed with
them.
Launched
on the evening of Dec. 9, the six member
crew has also delivered supplies for the ISS, a new truss segment, and a new
station resident, who will stay on the ISS when Discovery returns to Earth.
For STS-116 commander Mark
"Roman" Polansky, pilot Bill
Oefelein and their four crewmates, the mementos in their personal
preference kits (PPKs) and in the Official Flight Kit (OFK) are souvenirs of
their just begun 12-day
mission to be given to family, friends, and organizations that they
support. For Sunita
Williams, who moved onto the ISS on Monday, they'll act as reminders of
home for the duration of her six-month stay.
[View the entire
manifest of the STS-116 OFK on collectSPACE.com]
"We all have a small amount that we can take up on
shuttle," Williams told collectSPACE.com.
"For the station we have a little extra [room] that we can take up of
stuff that we can really use while we are up there, like a ball cap or
whatever."
"It's just like your office, where you have pictures of your
family or little things that are mementos to you and some of that stuff is a
little extra for station crew members [as] we are going to be there for a
longer period of time," said Williams.
The photos she has brought with her include a special member of
the Williams' family: her "crazy" Jack Russell Terrier named Gorby.
"Unfortunately, I cannot bring my dog [with me] but there
will be a lot of pictures of my dog up there."
Williams also has a copy of the Bhagavad Gita, a small
statue of Lord Ganesh and a letter written in Hindi by her father, representing
her half-Indian heritage.
For her six other crewmates, "house guests" to her new
home, their mementos are stowed and along for the ride.
Most have packed items for their hometowns, states and countries.
For three-time flyer Bob
"Beamer" Curbeam, that means continuing a tradition. "Every
flight that I have been on, I always take in my OFK a U.S. Virgin Islands
flag," said the mission specialist and spacewalker. "My grandfather
is from there, so I always take a flag from there."
"Whenever I fly my last [mission], after that I will return
it to the governor and life will be good," he said.
Similarly, Polansky, as the only other experienced crew member,
extended a custom of honoring his home state.
"I flew things for my high school on my first mission. Since
I grew up in Edison [New Jersey], I am flying an item for the Thomas Edison
museum in the hometown. I believe we are flying a state flag for the governor.
There's always a Jersey connection in there somewhere," shared commander
Polansky.
Described in the OFK manifest as a "blue plastic cast
cylinder" that is 4.25 inches long and 2 inches diameter, Polansky's item
for the Thomas A. Edison Menlo Park Museum is likely a wax cylinder for the
phonograph, the recording device invented by Edison.
For two crew members, the items they fly represent their status as
the first astronaut from their region.
Oefelein is the first to hail from Alaska, the 49th state.
"It's one of the fortunate things about being in the Navy.
I'm still an Alaskan resident and can still maintain my residency up there...
so I am taking something up for the state."
Indeed, six of the items in the OFK were borrowed from Anchorage, including a city medallion and a white shuttle patch from the Challenger
Learning Center of Alaska.
Christer
Fuglesang, the first
Swede in space, has a full compliment of items from his nation.
"I am bringing... the Stockholm city flag with me for the
town council there. I have a Swedish national flag I am flying for the
Parliament," Fuglesang told to reporters.
"I
have some things for some of the universities there, which I have been either
studying to or earn a doctorate from a university in northern Sweden called the
Umeå University, and the other ones are Stockholm University and the Royal
Institute of Technology. Those are some other things I am flying for Sweden," said the European Space Agency astronaut.
In addition to home states and countries, some are also flying
items for their families.
"I'm taking some things for my wife and kids. I'll probably
take a few photographs for my parents," Nick
Patrick, a mission specialist, told collectSPACE before the mission.
The items Joan
Higginbotham decided to take were very personal to her. "Your space to
take personal items is so limited and I struggle with that," she admitted.
"I am taking a picture of my father who passed away five
years ago. I am [also] taking a White Sox cap from the World Series," the Chicago native said.
"I am also taking a shirt that I had gotten from our family
reunion. I am taking it because my dad designed it when we went to our reunion
back eons ago."
"It's a light purple shirt, and on the front is the skyline
of Chicago and it's the neatest design I have ever seen. Of course, I am a
little biased," said Higginbotham.