I was a 10-year-old kid, glued to the TV, watching live coverage of the launch of Apollo 11 ...
I was 5. Like you, I was glued to the tV, warching thisBrazosBendHorn said:
I was a 10-year-old kid, glued to the TV, watching live coverage of the launch of Apollo 11 ...
I cannot begin to imagine how cool that was, being part of the NASA community during the Apollo program ...MAROON said:
I was 8, my Dad worked at NASA along with every other Dad that lived on our street. We moved to League City because of the space program along with the vast majority of the Clear Lake residents. It was a true company town back then.
It was very cool growing up there during the space race. Going to school with astronauts kids, knowing Dads who were in Mission Control. One of my friend's Dad helped design the Apollo space suit. Tour buses going through town, every major news service has a studio set-up on Nasa Road 1 year-round. Fun times.
Following up on this...I was 4 during Apollo 17 and 5 for the Skylab missions...have no recollection of any. The first mission I remember watching was ASTP, Apollo Soyuz with the last launch of the Apollo capsule, watching with my grandmother while spending several weeks with my grandparents at their farm in Missouri. The Saturn I-B isn't anything like the V but it was an incredible impression for me, almost age 7. Had to wait nearly a long 6 years for the launch of Columbia.New World Ag said:
I was 11 months old. I've wished many times I could have been old enough to experience it.
Speaking of the Saturn I-B: in the early 1980s I got to attend a talk given by Jerry Carr (commander of the last Skylab mission). He described the ride to orbit on the Saturn I-B as follows: "Imagine driving down a dirt road at 100 mph in a pickup with square wheels"New World Ag said:Following up on this...I was 4 during Apollo 17 and 5 for the Skylab missions...have no recollection of any. The first mission I remember watching was ASTP, Apollo Soyuz with the last launch of the Apollo capsule, watching with my grandmother while spending several weeks with my grandparents at their farm in Missouri. The Saturn I-B isn't anything like the V but it was an incredible impression for me, almost age 7. Had to wait nearly a long 6 years for the launch of Columbia.New World Ag said:
I was 11 months old. I've wished many times I could have been old enough to experience it.
I'm jealous of those of you who got to experience the whole program as kids...I would have been so into it.

Those things were nasty!BrazosBendHorn said:
And for you guys who were kids when Apollo 11 went up, did you bug your mom to buy some Pillsbury Space Food Sticks so you could eat cool space food like the astronauts?
https://www.metv.com/stories/space-food-sticks-were-the-coolest-snack-of-the-1970s
(And after consuming a few of them, did you feel like you'd been had by Madison Avenue?)
No but I did drink TANG.BrazosBendHorn said:
And for you guys who were kids when Apollo 11 went up, did you bug your mom to buy some Pillsbury Space Food Sticks so you could eat cool space food like the astronauts?
https://www.metv.com/stories/space-food-sticks-were-the-coolest-snack-of-the-1970s
(And after consuming a few of them, did you feel like you'd been had by Madison Avenue?)

