Space

Snatching a spinning spacecraft was ‘the greatest pride’ for 1st Canadian astronaut in space (video)

Canada’s first astronaut in space can’t believe how far the nation has come in 40 years.

Marc Garneau, who mostly flew with the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), embarked on the country’s first space shuttle mission in October 1984. Garneau celebrates that journey in his new book, “A Most Extraordinary Ride” (Penguin Random House, 2024). Four decades after his pioneering flight, Garneau told Space.com how amazed he was that CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen has been assigned to the Artemis 2 moon mission.

Garneau, first hired by Canada’s National Research Council before CSA was formed in 1989, flew three times in space, on the shuttle missions STS-41G (in October 1984), STS-77 (May 1996) and STS-97 (November-December 2000). He later was a Canadian government minister — and even CSA president. But one of his most memorable spaceflight moments was wielding the Canadarm robotic arm, as Garneau shares in the interview below.

Canadian Space Agency astronaut Marc Garneau (inset) operated the Canadarm during space shuttle mission STS-97 (pictured here) as well as STS-77. (Image credit: NASA)

This interview was edited for length and clarity and focuses on the Canadian NRC and CSA astronauts; note that Canadians have flown to space with NASA and on private spaceflight missions as well.


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