I am about a day and a half before I head out on my roadtrip to Florida for the NASA Tweetup event. I am so incredibly excited, and there just seems like there is far too much for me to do before I leave.
It almost doesn't seem like it is real. I mean usually when you get picked for such an amazing opportunity, you have months or even a year to prepare for it. Being on of the picked individuals, I had three weeks to prepare! I definitely consider this an instant gratification situation. I can not believe how quickly it is approaching.
I just thought I would put some thoughts down before I get back to cleaning and packing. Oh and finishing the last two episodes of Game of Thrones ( I know, I'm behind...)
Can't wait!
"There is an art . . . to flying. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." - Douglas Adams
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Monday, June 20, 2011
New Friends

NASA Tweetup is quickly approaching. I almost feel like with such an amazing opportunity, I should have to wait a year before actually getting to do this. Instead, this is almost instant gratification! I am so pleased with how everything is falling into place. I have been put into an amazing house. VAB House Represent! "Where good times are Assembled!" ha. My housemates all seem truly awesome. I can't wait to meet them in person and have such a memorable time! On Facebook, I already have multiple of inside jokes with different Tweetup attendees! It is such an amazing experience.
I have multiple friends that I have met off of YouTube. These friends I have made are truly some of the closest and best friends I have ever had. So, making friends from Facebook chats and comments isn't completely forign to me. I am thrilled at how many amazing people are going to be at the Tweetup. It is going to be such a fun experience.
Anyway. Wanted to talk a little about the friends that I already feel I have made through this, and the event hasn't even happened. Must go and fax a waiver to FAA!
"Matter flows from place to place and momentarily comes together to be you. Some people find that thought disturbing, I find the reality thrilling." -Richard Dawkins
Thursday, June 16, 2011
My Golden Ticket: Being One of the lucky 150 for STS135 NASA Tweetup

I am still in slight shock from what happened to me around noon on Friday, June 10th...
I had just gotten out of my Numerical Analysis class and was at lunch with some aerobuddies (and other non-aero friend). We were talking about what were our plans for the weekend and other random events. I knew there was going to be an announcement of the selected that day and was going to check my email before I headed to work. I pulled up my phone and I saw it....
"Congratulations, you have been selected to attend the NASA Tweetup on July 7-8 for space shuttle Atlantis' targeted launch at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida!"
I literally almost fell out of my chair out of excitement. I kept rereading the email to make sure I wasn't just seeing things or
making things up. When I signed up for the NASA Tweetup, I never thought I would actually get chosen. I couldn't believe my good fortune. Still in shock I called my father about it and squeed on the phone for a good 30mins. I was literally on Cloud 9 the rest of the weekend. Such an amazing opprotunity was given to me. I waited for an hour before actual posting anything on my status on facebook. i wanted to clear my head so that I could actually form sentences. The status I posted was this:"I was one of the 150 out of 5,500 people chosen to attend the STS135 NASA TweetUp!!! I can not describe how thrilled I am right now. I actually feel like I could blast off any moment!! What an amazing opportunity this is. I am truly honored!"

That weekend, I continued to go back and reread the email. Not to mention the amazing group of people I found myself among.
I am so truly honored to be among these people and for being chosen by the NASA Tweetup crew.
I want to thank @NASATweetup for giving me this amazing opportunity that will be something I will continue to look back on. I will hopefully one day build rockets that will instill such awe and amazment that the Shuttles remain to instill in myself.
I know some NASA Tweetup folks will be reading this, so to all of you, I simply cannot wait to meet you all in person and share this life changing experience. I am honored to be counted among all of you amazing fellow space tweeps. See you in Florida!
Interested in keeping up with the #STS135 #NASATweetup crew? Follow the list here:
STS135 NASATweetup List
Interested in following what I do? Follow me here:
Mary Kate (@TimeLord_mk)
I also have a dailybooth:
MK Dailybooth
"Let's face it, space is a risky business. I always considered every launch a barely controlled explosion."— Aaron Cohen
Let's Catch Up, Shall We?

I haven't kept up with this blog at all! Although it is to be expected. Time is short and there are never enough hours in a day in my major.
So, I will catch you up.
Space Cowboys.
After 8 months of designing, planning, building, testing, and headaches, my rocket design team launched our full scale rocket, Leviathan in Virginia at NASA Wallops Flight Facility last May. It was quite the challenge too. We had many different obstacles to overcome throughout the process. When spring semester ended, Space Cowboys shifted into high gear. We spent many all
And some how within a week and a half we achieved in finishing Leviathan, and even painting him. He looked gorgeous. We loaded up and road tripped to VA. When we arrived we still had a few things to finish up on our rockets.
hours to figure out what we were going to do. At first we thought we were going to have to MacGuyiver our rocket together. We even went to Wal-mart that night and bought 2 alarm clocks, plastic tubing and a remote control car. We were in for a long night. James, our chief engineer, pulled it off though, he made the keyswitch system we had into a pull system. So we had a loop outside the rocket, that a rope was tied to, and once pulled the rocket's altimeters and GPS systems would turn on. So we were green for launch.
The rail we got to use at Wallops was truly amazing. This rail some pretty huge rockets had launched from. and while our
rocket, Leviathan, was the largest rocket at the University Student Launch Initiative Level 2 Challenge, It would look tiny to any rocket Wallops launched on that rail. (Our rocket was 11ft tall, 7in in diameter, FYI) I was one of the lucky ones who was able to
Two members and myself went into the Block House where we could press the ignition button. We sat there quietly and
Looking nervously out into the Atlantic Ocean. My heart felt like it was going to come out of my chest it was beating so hard. I know I annoyed that safety officer asking if she had heard anything every 20 secs. We got the word that our rocket had separated drogue and main! The boat was headed out to retrieve it. I felt a wave of relief as I realized that we were going to get our baby back. What a beautiful flight it was too.
There was a lot of excitement to be had at the success of our launch. We were happy that everything went smoothly. We even found out that 5 of the 6 CO2 canisters went off. Which is fantastic. (Our rocket has triple redundant systems so 3 canisters for the drogue and 3 canisters for the main)
USLI Level 2 at Wallops was truly an amazing experience, I wouldn't have traded for the world. It was amazing to see something you work for months on, come together and see it do what it was supposed to. Such an amazing flight Leviathan was. What a beautiful vessel.
If interested in watching an overview of our past year at space cowboys go here:
Space Cowboys 2010-2011
Husker.
I have been working on building my Level 1&2 certification rocket the past two and a half weeks. It has been a really cool
Classes have gone well this past semester I am taking summer classes now. I also have a really big announcement but am going to write a second blog post for that.
So, until then...
<3
"The Cosmos is all that is or ever was or ever will be. Our feeblest contemplations of the Cosmos stir us — there is a tingling in the spine, a catch in the voice, a faint sensation of a distant memory, as if we were falling from a great height. We know we are approaching the greatest of mysteries." - Carl Sagan
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)