Adding content has not been far from my mind, it just became lower priority when compared with work, final exams and term papers. A few failed attempts at getting new pictures also did not help. I borrowed our division camera for the last launch and the shots came out terrible. I missed landing because of meetings. I tried to take Myca out to the boat dock and it was closed off. Fortunately it has been summer vacation, so the break was probably well timed.
Another challenge is that Myca has seen many of the major things on center. There are a few other places I can think of that might be cool to take her, but eventually I will run out of them. The question then becomes whether I stop updating the site entirely or do something different with it.
I have very few pictures from Houston because my visit to JSC was so short. I considered posting a couple even though Myca was not in them. I will also be spending a day in Arizona with the Desert RATS next month and I hope to bring her for a photo opportunity there.
My question to those of you visiting the site is this: what do you want to see? A major driver for this page was to share, and it helps to share what others are interested in.
That said, I am going to end this post with a picture I took in the parking lot of the O&C when I left work tonight. The moon is almost full and the overall effect after a few camera tweaks is pretty cool. I love the feel of Kennedy Space Center at night. I think this is the first picture I've taken that even comes close to capturing it.

I will be back with some sort of update in about a week. Take care until then.

2 comments:
Your posts are often extremely interesting, regardless of whether you've got Myca in the shot. It's nice to get some insight into many of man's largest and most complex technologies in very understandable and candid blog posts. If you've got other things that have to take priority then do what you have to do, the point is for you to have as much fun writing about what you do as we have reading about it.
I have often heard that our space industry was instrumental in developing technologies that we now use in our daily lives... Velcro (and Tang) come to mind. Would you have an opportunity to share some other technologies that have resulted from NASA ingenuity and creativity, along with how they were intended to be used in the space program? Thanks,
Space Cadet
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