Skip to main content

NASA astronauts enjoy Thanksgiving holiday at 17,000 mph

As Americans around the world celebrated Thanksgiving on Thursday, there were four citizens enjoying the day in a slightly different way to everyone else. Because they’re in space.

Living and working aboard the International Space Station (ISS) means NASA astronauts Mark Vande Hei, Kayla Barron, Raja Chari, and Thomas Marshburn spent the holiday in microgravity conditions, eating rehydrated food from containers and drinking recycled water while orbiting Earth at 17,000 mph.

NASA on Thursday posted a video (below) of the four American astronauts sharing their thoughts about what Thanksgiving means to them, and how they were spending the day aboard the orbiting outpost.

Barron said they were all going to enjoy an “awesome” meal together with French astronaut Matthias Maurer and Russian cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Pyotr Dubrov.

“Luckily it doesn’t take us long to cook food in space because most of it is just reheating,” Barron said.

Items on the astronauts’ menu included “roasted turkey,” which Chari insisted would “taste delicious when we add some water.”

#HappyThanksgiving! Five Exp 66 astronauts talk about spending the holiday in space and the food they will share on the station. pic.twitter.com/mDOvEk8Tk8

— International Space Station (@Space_Station) November 25, 2021

NASA also posted a video looking at the history of Thanksgiving in space. It reveals that the first off-Earth Thanksgiving took place aboard Skylab 3 in 1973 with NASA astronauts Gerald Carr, William Pogue, and Edward Gibson able to enjoy a stunning view of Earth during the special day.

The next space-based Thanksgiving took place aboard Space Shuttle Atlantis in 1985. Since then, with the construction of the ISS at the turn of the century, the holiday has been celebrated in space every year since 2000.

Happy Thanksgiving from NASA!

And in case you’re wondering when exactly Thanksgiving happens on the space station, here’s the answer: The satellite uses the Universal Time Clock (UTC), equivalent to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) in London, for keeping time, so Thanksgiving officially started at 4 p.m. PT (7 p.m. ET) on Wednesday, November 24 (or midnight UTC/GMT), ending 24 hours later when most Americans back on terra firma were dropping onto the couch with a belly full of food.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Astronaut captures stunning images of a snowy Grand Canyon
A snow-covered Grand Canyon seen from space.

In the final days of his six-month stint aboard the International Space Station (ISS), Danish astronaut Andreas Mogensen took some time out of his science work to snap some striking photos of a snow-covered Grand Canyon.

The images were captured from the station in recent days as it orbited Earth at an altitude of around 250 miles.

Read more
Watch this astronaut’s ‘space waltz’ on the ISS
Marcus Wandt performing exercises aboard the space station.

Axiom Space’s third private astronaut crew to visit the International Space Station (ISS) returned safely to Earth on Friday after staying in orbit for just over two weeks.

Walter Villadei, Alper Gezeravcı, Marcus Wandt, and professional astronaut Michael López-Alegría departed the orbital outpost on Wednesday, four days later than originally planned due to poor weather conditions at the splashdown site off the coast of Daytona, Florida.

Read more
Homeward bound private astronaut shares gorgeous night shots of Earth
Earth as seen from the International Space Station.

Earth as seen from the International Space Station. Marcus Wendt/Axiom Space/NASA

Axiom Space’s third private mission to the International Space Station (ISS) was supposed to last two weeks, but the all-European crew stayed for a few extra days while it waited for the weather conditions to improve at the splashdown site off the coast of Daytona, Florida.

Read more