Science

Thirsk brings Canadian mementoes for long stay on space station

Astronaut Bob Thirsk brought some Canadian mementoes to keep him company during his six-month stay on the International Space Station.

Astronaut Bob Thirsk brought some Canadian mementoes to keep him company during his six-month stay on the International Space Station.

The Canadian astronaut can look at a photo of Jean Beliveau signed by the former Montreal Canadiens great and also read excepts from Anne of Green Gables after packing a page of the Canadian classic. The entire book was too heavy to accompany Thirsk, a Canadian Space Agency spokeswoman said.

Speaking from the orbiting space lab on Monday, Thirsk described Beliveau as a "class act" and a "role model."

"If I'm going to stay calm and collected on this mission, he's a good example for me to follow," he told reporters during a news conference that was broadcast live at the space agency's offices in Longueuil, Que., just south of Montreal.

The 55-year-old Thirsk said he brought the Anne of Green Gables material in honour of Koichi Wakata, one of his fellow space travellers, and "our Japanese friends who are also big fans."

Several rings that were specially designed for his wife, two sons and daughter were also in his space luggage.

Settles in for long stay

The native of New Westminster, B.C., appeared in awe as he answered questions along with his five fellow space travellers.

"Believe me, this is a surreal world here," he said, without elaborating. "I sometimes feel I'm in the middle of a Salvador Dali painting."

Thirsk admitted to encountering a steep learning curve as he settles in for the six-month trip, a record stay in space for a Canadian astronaut.

"In one respect the space station looks similar to what I expected," he said. "The training simulators that we have in the various countries are very good and they give us some good background training.

"On the other hand, the place looks completely different from what I expected in that there's a lot of stowage all over the place."

Thirsk, who landed on the station Friday, said his greatest fear is making a serious blunder while his greatest challenge will be to improve his efficiency.

"You know astronauts always have fear of injury or death, but our greatest fear is of making a mistake, so I just hope I can get through this six months without making any serious mistakes," he added.

His arrival with Russia's Roman Romanenko and Belgium's Frank De Winne means there are six astronauts aboard the station for the first time in its 10-year history.

The trio blasted off on board a Soyuz spacecraft last Wednesday from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

It's the first time a Canadian has travelled to the space station aboard a Russian Soyuz. In the past, U.S. space shuttles were used to ferry Canadian astronauts up and down.

Thirsk said it was a smoother ride than his only other space mission, in 1996, when he flew as a payload specialist aboard the space shuttle Columbia.

"If you're to think of the space shuttle as a powerful SUV, then Soyuz is a nimble sports car," he said as his five colleagues gathered around. "The ride was quite a bit smoother, I thought, than the shuttle. For the first two minutes of the shuttle flight it's pretty bumpy, it's impossible to read.

"But in the Soyuz it was smooth all the way up."

Thirsk, a medical doctor, also outlined his routine, saying he gets up at 6 a.m. GMT for what turns into a busy day.

"It's a steady pace but a lot gets accomplished," he said.

Thirsk will conduct space experiments

During his time in space, Thirsk will participate in a York University experiment that will help people who have trouble telling up from down.

He will also operate a little rover-type vehicle nicknamed Red by remote control from space.

The robot, the size of a thick suitcase, is parked and waiting for his commands in a backlot of the Canadian Space Agency.

The six astronauts now on board will soon be joined by seven others, including Canadian Julie Payette, who is scheduled to blast off June 13 aboard the U.S. space shuttle Endeavour on a 16-day mission.

That will be the first time Canada has two astronauts in space at the same time.

In an article in the most recent edition of the Canadian Medical Association Journal, Thirsk and other international space experts said the two main challenges associated with human space flight are radiation and the physiological consequences of living and working in a microgravity environment.