Monday, April 11, 2016

Of Sports and Space


HOME SWEET HOME:  Friday afternoon, we made our way to our home away from home, Safeco Field, for the Seattle Mariners' home opener.

We caught a bus from our neighborhood and arrived in the stadium district about 3:30. Then, it was time to claim a spot on the sidewalk to call our home for the next hour-plus, until the gates opened. 

Once inside the stadium, we made a beeline for the 'front row' along the bullpens. When we arrived, the Oakland As were taking batting practice. 
And we're happy to report, it was a banner day for balls flying our way!

We nearly missed four of five or so that sailed near us, but one ball came right at us. As in, right toward CJ's face. In fact, that's how he 'caught' it. Here is a photo re-enactment of that moment. ...
The 'best' part was right after it ricocheted off his face, Annabelle fielded it and triumphantly, jubilantly yelled, "I caught it! I caught it!" :)

Annabelle was also lucky enough to be handed a BP ball by a King County Sheriff's deputy patrolling the pen pre-game. Since we already had a ball, we gifted that one to a 'young' man (30-ish) standing near us. He was SO happy, and said it was the first game ball he'd ever had. We watched as he immediately posted it to every social media platform known to mankind. ;)

Pregame fun continued with Mariners legend Ken Griffey Junior taking the field to throw out the first pitch. 
 A new banner was unveiled at Safeco, counting down Junior's induction into the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame. 
The guys in white in the photo above are Dave Valle (above the 1), Jay Buhner (the bald guy above the zero) and Dan Wilson (above the 7).

Junior tossed the first pitch to catcher (and future Hall of Famer) Felix Hernandez. They hugged it out afterward. 
Not to be forgotten was the pre-game salute to Dave Henderson - the FIRST player ever drafted to the Seattle Mariners! Dave is gone way too soon, stricken by a heart attack at age 58, during this last off season. 
Had to get a snap of the very first pitch of the 2016 season, of course. It was a strike, from King Felix. The photo was taken from the second to last row of the stadium, by the way.
SPEAKING OF SPORTS: Sunday afternoon, we headed to Queen Anne Bowl to watch a lacrosse match. 
 Christian's brother was on a team from Portland, up playing in a tournament.  
A super entertaining match, it came down to the last couple of minutes. We learned a lot about lacrosse in an hour or so!

UP ON THE ROOF(DECK): Friday, the weather was lovely, so we thought we'd take to the outdoors to get some exercise in. We used Annabelle's laptop to follow along to a kids' yoga lesson on YouTube.
 Kirby was keenly interested in getting into the act. Below is her version of 'downward dog.'

UPS AND DOWNS: We watched Friday afternoon as SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launched a Dragon full of cargo to the International Space Station (ISS) for NASA. Fortunately, the launch went without a hitch and the capsule is now attached to the ISS. But perhaps even more exciting was what happened back on Earth not long after the launch.  The first stage of Falcon 9 attempted an experimental landing on the “Of Course I Still Love You” droneship (barge) in the Atlantic Ocean.

You can watch the AMAZING video of the history-making event here:
https://youtu.be/sYmQQn_ZSys



The entire Webcast of the launch is available online, as well. 
https://youtu.be/7pUAydjne5M

In not-so-great space-related news, NASA has let the public know that during a scheduled contact on Thursday, April 7, mission operations engineers discovered that the Kepler spacecraft (deep space telescope) was in Emergency Mode (EM). Per NASA, "EM is the lowest operational mode and is fuel intensive. Recovering from EM is the team's priority at this time."

Due to the emergency, NASA now has priority access to ground-based communications at the agency's Deep Space Network. Currently, Kepler is 
nearly 75 million miles from Earth. At that distance, communications are slow. NASA reports that even at the speed of light, it takes 13 minutes for a signal to travel to the spacecraft and back.



It appears that the spacecraft entered EM not long before mission operations began the maneuver to orient the spacecraft to point toward the center of the Milky Way for the K2 mission's microlensing observing campaign.

Hopefully engineers can get Kepler back on track. The craft completed its prime mission in 2012, detecting nearly 5,000 exoplanets, of which, more than 1,000 have been confirmed. In 2014, it began a new mission called K2, searching for exoplanets while introducing new research opportunities to study young stars, supernovae, and many other astronomical objects.


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