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Astronaut launches are returning to the U.S. For each, this family sends NASA roses

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Astronaut launches are returning to the U.S. For each, this family sends NASA roses



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Before each mission with NASA astronauts, the Shelton family sends a bouquet of roses to the Mission Control Center at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.





James Blair/NASA



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James Blair/NASA



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He watched the Shuttle program through 1986, during the launch for Space Shuttle Challenger. Seventy-three seconds after liftoff the orbiter exploded, killing all 7 astronauts.

«Today is a day for mourning and remembering,» said President Ronald Regan in an address to the nation. «Nancy and I are pained to the core over the tragedy of Shuttle Challenger. We know we share this pain with all the people of our country. We know this is truly a national loss.»

NASA investigated the tragedy and resumed flying the shuttle two and a half years later.

For that first flight since the Challenger disaster, Mark, Terry and their daughter MacKenzie decided to send a bouquet of roses. Mark called a florist near NASA’s Johnson Space Center and ordered six roses — five for each of the astronauts returning on Space Shuttle Discovery’s mission, the first since the Challenger accident, and one white rose to represent the lives lost.

He wasn’t sure it would even get to mission control, let alone on time. He watched the landing during lunch, then returned to work.

«A phone rang off my desk,» he recalled when he returned to the office. It was NASA flight director Milt Heflin. «I was just in shock. I couldn’t believe it. They’re busy, they’ve got so much to do. How can they possibly be calling me?»

The roses made it. And they wouldn’t be the last. For 23 more years, Mark Shelton continued the tradition during the Space Shuttle program.





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MacKenzie Shelton (center) sets up a bouquet of flowers commemorating the 100th mission they’d sent flowers to the Mission Control Center in 2009. Her parents, Mark (left) and Terry (right), look on.





Robert Markowitz/NASA



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Robert Markowitz/NASA



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The Sheltons sent over 100 bouquets to NASA’s Mission Control Center including 14 white roses for the last Space Shuttle flight, symbolizing the lives lost in both the 1986 Challenger explosion and the 2003 Columbia accident.

The bouquet is visible to the flight controllers in the Mission Control Center. «It was always prominent, but it was never in the exact same spot,» said Dye, who retired from NASA in 2013 as the longest-serving flight director.

Mark Shelton said they do this because there are people outside of NASA rooting for the flight directors but it also serves as a symbol of the immense responsibility of those working in NASA’s Mission Control Center.

«If they were looking at those flowers, they were looking at the number of people whose life was in their hands,» he said. «That white rose is a pretty stark reminder that people have lost their lives in the space program.»

He says every card that accompanies the flowers says something different, but it’s always signed the same: Godspeed. Mark, Terry and MacKenzie.





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In this image released by NASA, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company’s Crew Dragon spacecraft onboard stands upright at sunset on the launch pad as preparations continue for the Crew-3 mission. The rocket, bound for the International Space Station, is scheduled to launch early Sunday, Oct. 31.





Joel Kowsky/AP



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Joel Kowsky/AP




In this image released by NASA, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the company’s Crew Dragon spacecraft onboard stands upright at sunset on the launch pad as preparations continue for the Crew-3 mission. The rocket, bound for the International Space Station, is scheduled to launch early Sunday, Oct. 31.


Joel Kowsky/AP


  • mission control

  • flowers

  • SpaceX

  • NASA

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