....Brian Duffy, commander of the 1996 shuttle Endeavour mission STS-72,
was surprised by his crew mates with a specially-designed "shuttle putter"
which was put to good use between tasks by using a golf ball and duct tape
roll as a makeshift "hole"...
http://www.collectspace.com/news/news-112206a.html
....Tim Terry, who designed the club and arranged for it and a ball to be
"smuggled" on-board ... "It's much more difficult to putt in space than on
Earth," Duffy admitted, ... "Here [on the ground] there are only two
dimensions to worry about. In space, you can also miss up or down."...
http://www.usga.org/news/2003/october/spacemen.html
....Following the mission, Terry and Duffy decided to donate the putter to
the USGA, which already had the "Moon Club" used by astronaut Alan Shepard
on display in its Museum. Now the putter sits alongside Shepard's 6-iron...
http://www.usga.org/news/2006/october/astronauts.html
On Fri, 24 Nov 2006 18:28:30 +0000, Jim Oberg wrote:
Don't forget the golf putting on the space shuttle!!
"Craig Fink" wrote in message
news
Golfer Alan Shepard's golf shot on the Moon,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZLl3XwlAIE
Golfer Mikhail Tyurin's golf shot on the Space Station,
http://youtube.com/watch?v=0dIPf5tDuLo
Longer, good view of equipment and memorabilia, short golf shots inside
the Space Station
http://youtube.com/watch?v=jBFxRXziy44
--
Craig Fink
Courtesy E-Mail Welcome @ --
Was it a hook or slice? Well with no air, it wouldn't be much of a
hook.
Slice it is!
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...468676,00.html
...gold-plated six-iron...He complained to his spacewalking
colleague..."My feet are drifting away", "I'm afraid to move" and
"Something's in my way . . . is it you?"...mission controllers in
Korolev..."Make sure you don't hit Michael."...The Russian space
agency,... said that the ball would keep going for more than three
years...Nasa calculated that it would stay in space for three days
before dropping into Earth's atmosphere...
Looks like there was some disagreement, three years or three days? I
guess
we'll just have to wait to see just how bad he sliced the ball.
...3-Gram Golf Ball...
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/storie...11/24/017.html ...U.S.
astronaut in the role of caddy...
The Russian golfer, Tyurin, had three balls. What happened to the
other two? Michael Lopez-Alegria didn't get to hit one?
...three superlight balls...
http://www.abcnews.go.com/Technology...2675504&page=1
...NASA,... was less than amused...
I don't think NASA approved Alan Sheppard's round of golf, but
everyone was amused.
...Shepard is also remembered for being the only person to play golf
on the Moon with a Spalding six-iron head attached to a lunar sample
scoop handle...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Shepard ..His first shot, which he
duffed, only went a hundred feet, but his second shot, which he hit
squarely (with only one arm, as the bulkiness of his 21-layer
spacesuit prevented him from using both arms), sent the ball as he
said "miles and miles."...
Spalding, now e21 Golf
http://www.e21golf.com/
On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 08:32:14+0000, Brian Gaff wrote:
Well, I listened while in bed last night to the surreal mental
picture of a
Russian and an American playing a golf shot in space.
I could not help but think of it as completely mad, but somehow
endearingly
human. From the comments I got the distinct impression that the
absurdity
of the moment was not lost on the participants either.
Still, it happened, and seems to have been successful, even thought
the 'ball' went in an unexpected direction.
--
Craig Fink
Courtesy E-Mail Welcome @
--
Craig Fink
Courtesy E-Mail Welcome @