NASA astronaut celebrates Thanksgiving on ISS with turkey socks, Earth views
'Grateful for good perches, and my family who sent me these socks.'
A NASA astronaut's feet cosplayed as a turkey in space.
NASA astronaut Loral O'Hara received new turkey socks for U.S. Thanksgiving on the International Space Station (ISS). She then spent a part of her day off in orbit on Thursday (Nov. 23) showing off the turkey feet at various points around the 356-foot (109-meter) complex.
"Grateful for good perches, and my family who sent me these socks," O'Hara posted Friday (Nov. 24) on X, formerly Twitter. The pictures with the post included a view out the cupola window of the ISS that featured a Russian Soyuz spacecraft, with the turkey feet appearing to cling on the frame of the window.
The crew mainly spent the day relaxing alongside "enjoying holiday treats like chocolate, duck, quail, seafood, pumpkin spice cappuccino and more," NASA officials wrote on Friday of the crew's Thanksgiving activities.
Another eerie view of O'Hara socks in the Japanese Kibo module showed off the floating feet in front of the airlock, which astronauts recently used to prepare a materials experiment for exposure on the exterior of the ISS.
If you look carefully in the background of the photo, you can also see a series of flags representing the partners of the ISS, as well as a set of three small globes depicting the moon, Earth and Mars.
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Grateful for good perches… and my family who sent me these socks 🦃 pic.twitter.com/yYPQgAEvx6November 24, 2023
O'Hara did not specify on which cargo ship the socks arrived, but presumably it was the SpaceX cargo Dragon spacecraft that docked with the ISS on Nov. 11 with supplies and experiments, including a laser communications test. O'Hara arrived herself at the ISS on Sept. 16 via a Russian Soyuz spacecraft, alongside cosmonauts Oleg Kononenko and Nikolai Chub, both of Russia's space agency Roscosmos.
The ISS Expedition 70 crew also include the SpaceX Crew-7 astronauts, which are ISS commander Andreas Mogensen of the European Space Agency, NASA's Jasmin Moghbeli, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Satoshi Furukawa and Russian cosmonaut Konstantin Borisov. Amid hundreds of experiments, O'Hara and Moghbeli also did the fourth-ever all-female spacewalk on Nov. 1.
Meanwhile on the ground, a new ISS crew assignment was announced in Canada on Wednesday (Nov. 22). The Canadian Space Agency's (CSA) Joshua Kutryk will fly to the ISS with the Boeing Starliner-1 crew in 2025. That will be the CSA's first long-duration mission since fellow agency astronaut David Saint-Jacques flew in 2018-19.
Starliner is the second U.S. commercial craft tasked with delivering astronauts alongside SpaceX Crew Dragon, although the Boeing spacecraft has been delayed in testing with crews due to technical problems over the years.
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Elizabeth Howell (she/her), Ph.D., was a staff writer in the spaceflight channel between 2022 and 2024 specializing in Canadian space news. She was contributing writer for Space.com for 10 years from 2012 to 2024. Elizabeth's reporting includes multiple exclusives with the White House, speaking several times with the International Space Station, witnessing five human spaceflight launches on two continents, flying parabolic, working inside a spacesuit, and participating in a simulated Mars mission. Her latest book, "Why Am I Taller?" (ECW Press, 2022) is co-written with astronaut Dave Williams.