TOUR AMERICA 2019: FLORIDA SPACE COAST

Home Is Where We Park It:  Joy RV Park

Date:  April 7, 2019

Historic Cocoa Village and Riverfront Park

Ah yes another day in paradise.  And with no good reason to really get up, ok, forget that Marti is already asking to go out.  No complaints since he doesn’t do his business in the rig.  Out the door and off for a walk we went.

Now 7 am and it is already time to turn the AC on.  I discovered it is more efficient to turn it on before it gets really hot in the afternoon.  This way it has a chance to cool off the walls, ceiling, etc. so it doesn’t have to labor later bringing the temperature down from the mid 80’s or higher.

Time for breakfast.  On the menu this morning was French Toast covered with Hot Pepper Jelly, fried Spam, a glass of Orange Juice, and a specialty coffee.  Just what I needed to kick-start my system and get it into high gear.

Then it was over to the pool.  Yes, they have a very nice heated pool here and though I don’t normally go swimming I did today.  What’s nice, no kids running around, screaming, splashing water and so on.  Think maybe I’m getting older?  Very refreshing and great for exercising the knees.

Time to catch up.  Over the last several days along with everything else we’ve been doing we’ve taken time to also explore Historic Cocoa Village and Riverfront Park.  First up,

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Historic Cocoa Village, the downtown core of the City of Cocoa, was first settled in the mid 1800s and has evolved into one of Brevard County’s finest shopping and entertainment districts and  a popular destination for those coming either by car or by boat.  If you are coming by car this is the main drag that takes you thru the center of town

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If coming by boat this is the Cocoa anchorage on the Indian River.  It has a minimum depth of 6 feet and room for just about any size vessel.

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This gentleman had just returned from town and was transferring his goods from his dinghy to his boat.

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Back to the village now and some of the delightful sights we discovered and experienced.  How about some really colorful park benches.

Yup, I found my turtle!

We also discovered some colorful murals covering the sides of several buildings.

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There were any number of unique shops.

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The price tag on this little one was I believe $169.00.  Out of our budget.

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Then we came to the best of the best IMHO.

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On watch out front.

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The official name of this store is the Antilles Trading Company. This shop offers the finest in maritime antiquities, well-appointed historical clothing, refined nautical furnishing as well as a grand collection of meticulously curated treasures. They We are stuffed from keel to gunwales with treasures from the high seas.

During my time in the store I met the owner of this fabulous shop and spent over an hour talking with and listening to her as she described her shop and talked about her life and travels.  I discovered that she holds a captain’s license.  She travels the world over to collect pirate log books, artifacts, clothing, weapons, navigational instruments and so much more.  What an honor it was to meet her and listen to her as she talked about her passion for all things pirate.

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As we finished our conversation she shared with me that she will be converting a store to a museum probably by June of this year.  Her plans are to include a number of interactive displays among everything else.

Finally, here are a few more displays that I discovered there.

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A jolly good pirate!

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The captain’s cabin.

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There is so much, much more here.  If you ever come to Cocoa put it on your must see list and you will not be disappointed!

Time to move down the block to Taylor and Riverfront Park.  Taylor Park is a small park that comes first.  Behind it and stretching along the water front is Riverfront Park.

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Riverfront Park in combination with Taylor Parks gives the public permanent access to a delightful place to relax right in the middle of downtown Cocoa.

There is a large green space.

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There is an outdoor amphitheater.

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Alongside the theater I discovered this.  Don’t think I’ll be around for the opening of this.

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Within the park you can take a nap.

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Have a birthday picnic party.

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Kids can play in the water fountains.

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Kids of all ages of course!

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You can catch a tan.

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Bottom line, the village and the park are great places to visit.  Do so, you’ll never regret it.

We’re now up to date on The Road of Retirement.  Update, since Barbara is back on her insulin she is feeling so much better.  We’ve been having a wonderful time these last several days and are ever so grateful for the days we’ve had and the fantastic discoveries we’ve made.  More to come, but today it’s back to the pool now.

Thanks for joining us as we journey along.  We always enjoy your company.  Pool time, till tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s occupants, four paws and two humans.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have not been before

See you on down the road

 

 

TOUR AMERICA 2019: FLORIDA SPACE COAST

Home Is Where We Park It:  Joy RV Park

Date:  April 6, 2019

American Police Hall of Fame and Museum

OK, no more walking for a day or two.  I’m going to rest my knees.  Give them a well deserved day off,  NOT!  Maybe when I’m old and gray I’ll take it easy.  I’m nowhere near there yet so forget taking it easy right now.  As long as the knees bend I’m going to keep going.  There is just too much to see and do for one to sit around and act old.

This morning when we woke it was already down right warm.  I believe the temperature at 7 am was already something like 72 or 73 degrees.  Could it be that summer is finally here?  It’s beginning to feel like it.

Where to?  Barbara had discovered a place that we both really wanted to see.  It was the American Police Hall of Fame and Museum.  Given that our son Adam is in law enforcement this was a must for both of us.  Off we went and in no time we were there.

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Founded in 1960, the American Police Hall of Fame and Museum is the nation’s first law enforcement museum and memorial dedicated to American law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty (more about the memorial later in the blog).  The museum through interactive simulators, displays, and over 10,000 artifacts, educates the public about the history and current trends in law enforcement.

Upon entering the museum you see in front of you a display of historic and current police vehicles.

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Here are two vehicles from the past.

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The one on the left is rather interesting.

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Yet the one that captured my attention immediately was Officer Hank’s vehicle that is covered completely with signatures front to back, top to bottom.

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This car is an ever vivid reminder of the fact that those who serve and protect are always in harm’s way.  Following are some of the signatures that are on the car.

This one really hit home.  A niece is now without her beloved uncle.  It can happen at any time.  It’s why Barbara and myself always say a silent prayer for our son, Adam, whenever he is on duty.  We know already of a couple of close calls that he has had, at least the few he will tell us about.

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There was also a display of police motorcycles.

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There were several display cases of all kinds of police equipment.

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Including anbomb robot

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There was a display dedicated to the Blue Knights.

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This bike is on loan from a Blue Knight and retired police who had a dream of traveling around the world to promote the efforts of all law enforcement everywhere.  The tour began on May 15, 2006 and ended on July 30, 2009.

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Some of the route he took is outlined on his bike.

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There is a full size jail cell.

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Which Barbara decided was just the right size for me!  So here I am singing the jail house blues.  I have to say I knew I could walk out at any time, but it is a disconcerting feeling to have that door slammed shut with you inside.

Singing the jail house blues

After she locked me up but found that no jail could hold me she tried something different.  She put me in the electric chair!

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Once strapped into the chair prisoners received a first jolt of 2400 volts and if that didn’t work they were given a second jolt.  Well, I survived so Barbara tried yet something different.  Into the gas chamber I went.

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I don’t care what anyone says, I can’t imagine having to die in either of the two ways above.  Just sitting in each sent chills up and down my spine.  It’s no way to go.

Next, here is a display that gives one pause to think.  Look closely at each weapon.

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Think about it.  You’ve just a received a call Shots fired at such and such a location.  It’s dusk, the lighting is poor.  You arrive at the scene and someone rushes at you and points one of the above directly at you.  You have a split second to decide, toy or real weapon?  Each of the above is supposed to have an orange tip on them so I can tell it is a toy – do you see such on any of the above.  What do I do?  Do I fire because I believe my life is in imminent danger?  Do I wait and perhaps discover the hard way that it is a real weapon and they intend to take my life before I can act?   In that split second you life literally hangs in the balance.  What you do can never be reversed.  I’m glad I will never be put into such a situation.  I pray that my son will never be either.

While we’re on the subject of weapons here is an example of what some kids will come up with when intent on doing harm.  There is home made pistols and a knife in a hair brush.  Unbelievable but true.

guns kids made and took to school

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OK, on the lighter side there was this exhibit.

Yes, we found them all!

Moving on there was a canine memorial that calls our attention to those special dogs who faithfully served and were loyal to the end.

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The Hall of Fame, though, is more than just a museum.  They offer compassionate programs for families of fallen officers, including for instance birthday parties, scholarship programs, summer camp, and holiday gifts.

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There is so much more here that if you haven’t been already I would encourage you to make time for a visit.  Allow at least two hours for your visit.  We owe it to ourselves to remember the sacrifices that police officers and their families make every day for you and me.

Before I close this post out there is one more exhibit that just stopped me in my tracks and tugged at my heart strings.  It is the Memorial Room.  It is a a 2000 sq ft. room created to honor and remember the over 9,000 who made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty.

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The marble walls you see in this room are inscribed with the names of the over 9,000 who made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty.  New names are added annually during Police Memorial Week.  It is estimated that every 57 hours a police office is killed in the line of duty somewhere in America.

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I have to say it was a truly somber experience to walk among and around these walls.  It was a display that definitely tugged at my heart and brought tears to my eyes.  Posting it is still a moving experience.

I’ll end this post now with the Prayer For Peace Officers

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Another day on The Road of Retirement is now in the books.  Once again we did it our way, traveling along, hand in hand, singing our song.  It was a very moving day in so many ways.  Today and always whenever I see a police office I make it a point to thank them for their service and to let them know I am praying for their safety.  Can I encourage you to please do the same?  Their job is a tough one and it is tough also on their families.

Thanks for coming along with us again.  We always enjoy your company and hope you will join us again tomorrow.  We have more traveling to do and places to see.  All of which we promise to share with you.

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s occupants, four paws and two humans.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have not been before

See you on down the road

 

 

 

 

TOUR AMERICA 2019: FLORIDA SPACE COAST

Home Is Where We Park It:  Joy RV Park

Date:  April 5, 2019

Veterans Museum and Exploration Tower

KABOOM!  And again, and again.  What a way to wake a guy up.  Thunder and lightening and pouring rain.  It sure got my attention in a hurry.  Thankfully, it didn’t last more than thirty minutes.  Oh well, no use trying to go back to sleep might as well get up and get going.

I had an appointment at 9:30 am at the local Chevy dealer for an oil and filter change for Little Graybeard.  I arrived exactly at the given time only to find out appointments mean nothing to them.  I was told the wait time was 1 hour and 20 minutes.  Forget it.  Once back home a little research showed that this dealer only had a 3 star rating out of 5.  I believe I know why.

Sightseeing time.  We headed to Meritt Island and the Veterans Memorial Park and Museum. This is the sign indicating that you are approaching the park itself.

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This is an 82-acre park jointly operated by the Veterans Memorial Center and the Brevard County Parks and Recreation Department.  It’s open to all every day of the year from dawn to dusk.  The park has a fishing pier, 1.5 miles of walking and hiking trails, three ponds, and a canoe launch ramp with access to Sykes Creek,  Within the park itself is the Veterans Museum.  Approaching the front door, off to the right is this striking

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exhibit of the front of a Vietnam era Huey with a mural of grunts jumping off .

3 Veterans Museuim Building Huey Front Entrance

This is a picture of the museum as you enter the front door.  It is a two-story building.

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The Museum collects, preserves and displays artifacts of the military history of the United States, with special emphasis on Brevard County veterans, in order to educate the community and inspire present and future generations with the military’s service and sacrifice.  With an amazing array of military artifacts ranging from the Revolutionary War to our current conflicts in the Middle East, the museum continues to strive to educate the public on our military’s efforts both past and present.

Once again it is impossible to post everything I discovered and took pictures of so I’ll just include some of the highlights.  We begin with WWI and the most decorated solider of that war.

I saw this and got a real chuckle.  When you think your RV is too small remember this poor guy who only had a tarp to call home.

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An American flag from 1877.

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From the Vietnam war the uniform we wore and the uniform of the Vietcong

A map of South Vietnam showing the city of Pleiku in the Central Highlands where I was stationed in 1968 and 1969

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They had a complete exhibit on women in the military.  Before 1990 they served in support roles, but by 1990 and beyond they began to serve in combat roles.

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Moving outside we find the Memorial Plaza.

Outside Memorial Plaza

Outside Memorial Plaza overall view of

Within the Park they have Memorials  going back to the Revolutionary War.

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They have even erected a Memorial to all the dogs who served.

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But of all the exhibits that I saw there these two really spoke volumes to me.

We absolutely enjoyed our time here at this museum.  As a Veteran I am so grateful that there are those who are working to preserve our military heritage and to remind every one of the sacrifices made by all those who have served and are continuing to serve our country.

The day was not over.  We next went to the Exploration Tower.

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The Exploration Tower is absolutely breathtaking.  It’s a combination of fun plus education.  It has six floors of exhibits and an outdoor observation deck on the seventh floor.   Let’s go inside and see some of the highlights.  The first floor lobby contains this stunning exhibit called Embrace that just seems to swim across the lobby above you.

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4 Exp towe lobby display explained

There was a floor dedicated to the history of the Port of Canaveral.

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A picture of port

The idea of developing a port at this location was first conceived in the 1880s. The port was dredged between 1951 and 1955.  Dedication occurred November 4, 1953, with the Navy destroyer escort USS McCelland participating.

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Cruise traffic appeared at the port in 1964.  Today there are over five cruise lines that call the port home and dock at one of the five cruise terminals.  Unfortunately, the day we were there none were in port.

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Port Canaveral also played a role in support of NASA projects out of nearby Kennedy Space Center. During the Apollo program, segments of the Saturn V rocket transited through the port and lock. In addition during the years of the Space Shuttle program the Shuttle’s external tanks were floated into Port Canaveral for each mission, and the solid rocket boosters were towed back through Port Canaveral after being fished out of the Atlantic Ocean after each launch.

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Up another floor and when you come out of the door guess what you see?  A wall of surfboards!

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Also on this floor is an exhibit of the many things one can do at Cape Canaveral.

 

Up to the observation deck and I found this stunning display of a turtle.  If you haven’t figured it out yet I like turtles.  They remind me that you never get anywhere in life unless you are willing to stick your neck out and come out of your shell.

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Finally some pictures from the observation deck.  Nope, no cruise ships this day.

If you are ever in this area don’t miss the opportunity to visit the Tower.  Just leave yourself at least two hours to take it all in.  It is a must see and I’m so grateful we had the opportunity to visit it.  Life is good indeed on our Road of Retirement.

Leaving the Exploration Tower we decided to look for a place to eat.  We landed here.

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At our table waiting for our food.

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My meal, three freshly made crab sliders.  Absolutely delicious!  As for Barbara, let’s just say she doesn’t like fish.

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Here is someone looking for a handout, but not going to get it from me!

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Meal over it was time to head for home.  We had another delightful day full of all kinds of wonderful new discoveries.  This is, if you ask me, what life is all about.  Good friends, good food, discovering new places, learning new things, and doing it together with the one you love.

Our day on The Road of Retirement is over for now.  Time to call it and get ready for Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune.  It’s amazing how even I have gotten hooked on TV.  But then again it was no different in my house that didn’t move.  So really why should it be so different now.

Thanks again for joining us on our journey.  Hope you enjoyed the trip.  Have a good night and we hope to have you with us tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s occupants, four paws and two humans.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have not been before

See you on down the road

 

 

 

 

 

TOUR AMERICA 2019: FLORIDA SPACE COAST

Home Is Where We Park It:  Joy RV Park

Date:  April 4, 2019

We Made It! Kennedy Space Center

Yes!  Yes!  Yes!  Today we made it to the Kennedy Space Center.  This has been on my bucket list for oh so long.  Yet, never in a million years did I ever believe I would ever get to go.  Hey, two years ago I thought I would still be working until July of this year.  Oh thank you Vonage for throwing me out the door and thereby setting us free on this remarkable journey that we’ve been on.

The good news first before we actually get into our day.  Barbara was finally able to get her insulin.  Now she can get back to taking her regular shot each day.  Hopefully, in a day or two she will be completely back to her old self and sassing me around!

Ready . . . Set . . . Go!  We’ve off on a day of exploration and new experiences.  We first dropped Marti off at day care.  We didn’t want to leave him in the cage a second day.  At day care he would have a whole room to run around in and other dogs to play with.

Next, we stopped at a so-called bagel shop for what they called bagels.  I asked for an everything bagel and it had everything but what an everything bagel was supposed to have on it.  Really?  They have no idea what a bagel really is.  How disappointing but we should have known better.

Finally we were off to the Kennedy Space Center.  If you’ve been there before you know how absolutely fantastic this place is.  If you’ve never been hopefully what follows will peak your interest in it and motivate you to put it on your must do list.  Also, what follows is just a small taste of this remarkable facility.  We spent some seven hours there and took over 250 pictures.  There is no way I could include it all in a blog.  So let’s get going.

These are the two entrance signs that let you know you are in the right place.

 

Once you have your tickets and go through the security check point you see the missile garden.

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This is an outdoor display of historic rockets that put Americans and satellites in space. Most of the rockets on display are real, though never flown in space. Remember: in the early days of America’s space program, we did not reuse or retrieve rockets once they launched.

Following the advice of others who have already toured this impressive complex  we arrived early and headed immediately for the bus tour.  This is a mural of The International Space Station on a wall leading to the loading area for the bus tour.

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Unfortunately, today the bus tour did not go to either of the launch pads nor several other places of interest.  That’s because the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket due to launch the Arabsat 6A communications satellite on Sunday night is on launch pad 39a.  Here it is as seen from the bus from about three miles away.  They were also supposed to test fire the engines tonight, Thursday.

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Another building we did see during the bus tour was the Vehicle Assembly Building.  The Vehicle Assembly Building, or VAB is designed to assemble the large pre-manufactured space vehicle components, such as the massive Saturn V and the Space Shuttle; and stack them vertically onto the Mobile Launch Platform and crawler transporter.   This is the only facility where assembly of a rocket occurred that carried humans beyond low-Earth orbit and on to the Moon.

 

Interesting note, the red and white stripes of the United States flag are each wide enough for a class A RV to drive down.  In the picture to the right you can see a mobile launch platform.  When a rocket is attached to it the crawler would move under it and transport it to one of two launch pads at a blazing speed of – ready for this – 1 mph!

A stop on the bus tour was to the Apollo Saturn V Center.  What an awesome display!  It is a large museum built around its centerpiece exhibit, a restored Saturn V launch vehicle, and features other space related exhibits, including an Apollo capsule. There are two theaters.  One simulates the Apollo 11 moon landing.

11 Apollo Saturn Theater Exhibit

The other theater simulates the environment inside an Apollo firing room during an Apollo launch.  This is part of the actual control room for Apollo 8 saved and reassembled here.

12 Apollo Saturn Theater Exhibit Portion of Original Lunch Control Room

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These three were the first to be launched by the Saturn V rocket,  first to escape from the Earth’s gravitational field, the first to orbit the Moon

This is the centerpiece of the museum the Saturn V  rocket that ushered in a new age in space exploration and propelled the Apollo capsules into space.

The Saturn V rocket was 363 feet tall, about the height of a 36-story-tall building, and 60 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty. Fully fueled for liftoff, the Saturn V weighed 6.2 million pounds. The rocket generated 7.6 million pounds of thrust at launch.  Whenever I feel a need for power going up a hill in my RV I’m going to think of the horsepower of this massive rocket.

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This is the complete Saturn V, as much of it as I could get.  The Saturn V was an expendable rocket used by NASA between 1967 and 1973. The three-stage liquid-propellant super heavy-lift launch vehicle was developed to support the Apollo program for human exploration of the Moon and was later used to launch Skylab, the first American space station.

The rocket as stated above had three stages. Each stage would burn its engines until it was out of fuel and would then separate from the rocket. The engines on the next stage would fire, and the rocket would continue into space. The first stage had the most powerful engines, since it had the challenging task of lifting the fully fueled rocket off the ground. The first stage lifted the rocket to an altitude of about 42 miles. The second stage carried it from there almost into orbit. The third stage placed the Apollo spacecraft into Earth orbit and pushed it toward the moon. The first two stages fell into the ocean after separation. The third stage either stayed in space or hit the moon.

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About that pen you see in the picture above, it is the Fischer Space Pen.

 

Here’s another interesting item on display.  Everyone should recognize this guy.

 

In this complex the Apollo 14 capsule was also on display.  I can’t imagine being stuffed into this contraption for any length of time.  Had to be awfully unconformable.

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There is so much more on display in this museum but it is just not possible to display all the pictures of everything we saw.  There were space suits, equipment that the astronauts used, a replica of the lunar rover, an actual piece of moon rock – yup you got to touch it and I did – and so much more.  I hope I’ve whetted your appetite to visit this museum if you haven’t already.  You owe it to yourself to go.

The next major display we visited based on the recommendation of others was the

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You gain entrance to the Shuttle museum by waking under this bad boy.

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Here is a scale model of the Shuttle and its external rockets and fuel tank.

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The three Space Shuttle Main Engines, in conjunction with the Solid Rocket Boosters, provide the thrust to lift the Orbiter off the ground for the initial ascent. The main engines continue to operate for 8.5 minutes after launch, the duration of the Shuttle’s powered flight.

After the solid rockets are jettisoned, the main engines provide thrust which accelerates the Shuttle from 3,000 mph to 17,000 mph in just six minutes to reach orbit. They create a combined maximum thrust of more than 1.2 million pounds.

As the Shuttle accelerates, the main engines burn a half-million gallons of liquid propellant provided by the large, orange external fuel tank. The main engines burn liquid hydrogen — the second coldest liquid on Earth at minus 423 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 252.8 degrees Celsius) — and liquid oxygen.

OK, once inside the museum you enter a wrap around theater that details the whole space shuttle program.  Then when the movie ends the screen in front of you disappears and there you see the Space Shuttle Atlantis.

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The space shuttle did many things. It could carry up to seven astronauts at a time. The space shuttle was like a moving van. It took satellites to space so they could orbit Earth. The shuttle carried large parts into space to build the International Space Station. The space shuttle was also like a science lab. Astronauts did experiments there. Doing experiments in space is different than doing them on Earth.  Each time a space shuttle launched, it was called a mission. The space shuttle launched for 135 missions. Each mission lasted for one or two weeks. The first mission was in 1981. The last mission was in 2011.

On April 12, 2011, NASA announced that Space Shuttle Atlantis would be provided to the visitors center for display after its last flight on and subsequent decommissioning. The exhibit officially opened on June 29, 2013, offering a nearly 360-degree view of the shuttle.  Atlantis is positioned at a 43.21 degrees angle with the payload bay doors open; a view only previously seen in space.

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When the shuttle orbiter returned to Earth, it came down from the sky like an airplane.  Here I am in the cockpit simulator preparing to land my very own shuttle.

16g Atlantis Display cockpit me flying

This is a picture of the underside with the titles installed that protected the shuttle and kept it from burning up on reentry.

16j Atlantis Display bottom and titles

Wheels came out from underneath the orbiter. It rolled to a stop on a runway. Then

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NASA would prepare it to fly on another mission.  This slide represents the downward angle of the shuttle as it prepared to land on the runway.

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Of course I had to try it.  Wheeeeeeeeeee and down we go.  What a blast!

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OK, one last picture.  Barbara and myself with the resident astronaut for picture taking.

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There you have it.  Our day at Kennedy Space Center.  Really, I’ve just scratched the surface it terms of the exhibits that are there, the simulators you can try, and so much more.  If you haven’t been there I’ll say it again you owe it to yourself to visit the complex.  Just be prepared to spend hours, if not several days to see it all.

That was our day on The Road of Retirement.  It was packed full of sight-seeing and exploration from sunup to sundown.  Just our kind of day.  Tomorrow, though, going to have to give my knees a bit of a rest.   Yes, I’m walking just fine but two days of constant walking still does take a toll on them.  They’re much, much better than ever before but I know when to give them a rest.  Thank you Lord for the progress that has been made.

Thanks for coming along with us today.  We hoped you enjoyed our little tour of the Kennedy Space Center.  Like I said, if you haven’t been there then what are you waiting for – go now!

These are the voyages of  Graybeard and it’s occupants, four paws and two humans.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have not been before

See you on down the road