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Home » Space » BREAKING: Bezos, Blue Origin Launch To Space
Space

BREAKING: Bezos, Blue Origin Launch To Space

Kyle Stewart Posted onJuly 20, 2021September 12, 2021 6 Comments
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In the new space race, billionaires launch themselves to the cosmos and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin can now officially join the party in the stars. 


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Blue Origin Touches the Stars

Today, there’s a new competitor in the human spaceflight business. Launching from Corn Ranch, TX, the launch took owner and former founder of Amazon just over the edge of space at the 100 kilometers height (62 miles) above the surfacr of the earth. Jeff Bezos isn’t flying alone, he is bringing along his brother (Mark Bezos) as well as Oliver Daemen, an 18-year old student from the Netherlands, and aviator Wally Funk.

The flight abord New Shepard, named after the Alan Shepard the first American to reach space, was its 16th. The prior 15 were successful missions including test landings and impaired vehicle test landings before taking humans on the rocket. It deploys a capsule with a human landing system, much like that of SpaceX, though unlike the lunar missions, the capsule is intended to land on dry ground and not splash down in the ocean.

Bezos and crew landed safely back on earth at 8:22AM Central time.

Historic

Blue Origin wanted its launch to be memorable. The launch date was not chosen at random, the Tuesday July 20 launch coincides with the day astronauts landed on the moon in 1969, what he described as a “seminal moment.”

However, it didn’t stop there. Wally Funk trained as an astronaut preparing for Mercury 13, but ultimately she was not selected. She will be the oldest visitor to space at 82, passing former astronaut and John Glenn at 77 who rode the Space Shuttle in 1998.

Oliver Daeman, the 18-year old physics student, pilot and son of a hedge fund manager will be the youngest person to ever reach space.

De 18-jarige Oliver Daemen uit Tilburg wordt de jongste astronaut ooit en de vierde Nederlander in de ruimte. Hij gaat mee met de ruimtereis van #BlueOrigin van #JeffBezos. Oliver is onderweg naar Texas, waar de lancering dinsdag plaatsvindt.https://t.co/hMsJWorRQK pic.twitter.com/5Xl3mqSAJt

— Bright (@Bright) July 15, 2021

Ever the history buff, Bezos has been buying space artifacts long before he started the company. Recently, he paid for the excavation of the Mercury 7 boosters to be recovered from the floor of the Atlantic ocean for his personal collection.

Bezos And The Billionaire Space Race

Blue Origin founder, Jeff Bezos, started his rocket company in the West Texas desert shortly after Musk began SpaceX and Tesla simultaneously. Richard Branson entered the fray as well and became the first of the three to reach suborbital space with Virgin Galactic less than two weeks ago. His trip was announced after Blue Origin but took place before todday’s launch in a showmanship only billionaires can truly appreciate.

Virgin Galactic is a different kind of competitor to Bezos and Musk. Bezos has set his sights on the moon with intentions to colonize both orbiting space stations and the lunar surface. He has stated in the past that humans should move heavy industry to the cosmos to rid the planet of pollution and leave light industry on the earth. Virgin Galactic is more interested in getting the well-to-do a reasonably-priced touch of space with five minutes of weightlessness for about $200,000. Those flights take off and land from New Mexico and seats are on sale now.

Musk’s SpaceX hasn’t been shy that Mars is the goal, but the moon will be a stopping off point which makes sense from a fuel and timeline perspective. It probably doesn’t hurt that NASA has awarded the aerospace company a hefty contract for its lunar landing program which will fund the Starship series of rockets ultimately used for the far longer journey to the red planet.

All three have enjoyed some level of success to this point, and while Musk hasn’t personally flown aboard his own rockets, he has successfully launched and returned astronauts to the space station in the only US-commercial trips.

Space Tourism, The Future Is Here… or Close

Since the 1950s, regular commercial flights to space have held the interest of the public. Before the last few weeks, however, space tourists were relegated to either science fiction or extremely expensive Russian vehicles. The future is here, or at least, close by. Blue Origin has said it will sell future trips on either New Shepard or New Glenn, SpaceX has already sold a trip around the moon slated for 2023, and Virgin Galactic has sold hundreds of seats to the stars as well.

Today’s flight saw a seat sold at auction to an undisclosed wealthy enthusiast though they ultimately could not make the flight due to scheduling conflicts.

Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC) is one of the few space companies openly traded to the public. While its focus is on securing government contracts and private satellite launches, infrastructure for the burgeoning industry may be supported by the company. Virgin Galactic (NYSE: SPCE) is also publicly traded, though it’s down 40% since Branson’s launch after the company announced a new stock sale.

Neither SpaceX nor Blue Origin stock is publicly available on the open market.

Conclusion

After more than 20 years in development, Blue Origin has advanced the cause of Space Tourism. While trips to the cosmos are not yet sold on Google Flights (how have they not yet made an Easter Egg for this?) it feels we are all closer than ever to the stars.

What do you think? Did you watch the trip today? Would you take a trip on a commercial rocket if given the chance? 

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About Author

Kyle Stewart

Kyle is a freelance travel writer with contributions to Time, the Washington Post, MSNBC, Yahoo!, Reuters, Huffington Post, MapHappy, Live And Lets Fly and many other media outlets. He is also co-founder of Scottandthomas.com, a travel agency that delivers "Travel Personalized." He focuses on using miles and points to provide a premium experience for his wife and daughter. Email: sherpa@thetripsherpa.com

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6 Comments

  1. Gravelly Point Guy Reply
    July 20, 2021 at 10:15 am

    Will there a chance to upgrade here?? And, will this count towards Global Servives “GS” status.

  2. Richard McCarthy Reply
    July 20, 2021 at 12:25 pm

    Did not watch, am not a fan. While I support the commercial crew to ISS activities as part of the SpaceX (and Boeing) agreements with NASA, this high-end space tourism stuff is all about prestige and privilege. it also fosters the absurd notion that journeys to LEO can become “routine.” When it comes to human space flight, two things will NEVER change; it will always be very expensive, and very dangerous. And please do not call these rich tourists “astronauts.” They deserve nothing more than the plastic wings airlines used to hand out to children passengers.

  3. TWA John Reply
    July 20, 2021 at 1:08 pm

    Bozo reminds me of an arch criminal from a Bond movie. The rocket design is out of a buggs bunny cartoon or twilight zone episode. Really it is just an extended carnaval ride, the “Parachute Drop”?
    At least Branson took up some hotties to continue his “Brand”.

  4. Brian L. Reply
    July 20, 2021 at 1:23 pm

    They should’ve left Bezos up there.

  5. cargocult Reply
    July 20, 2021 at 2:59 pm

    The envy manifested in the comments is pathetic. Any new technology is likely going to be expensive. You folx would have been complaining about rich folx and their privilege, wasting money on horseless carriages and flying machines. You wouldn’t have a commercial aviation industry to try to game if it weren’t for rich folx paying to fly for decades before costs came down to the level affordable by your average Spirit customer.

  6. cargocult Reply
    July 20, 2021 at 3:01 pm

    Also, how many of you folx soil you diapers at the thought of flying on a 737 Max? You’d be fine strapping in on a rocket flight, though, amirite? No sweat!

Leave a Reply to TWA John Cancel reply

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