|

Why the
Kennedy Space Center
is special
For decades the Kennedy Space Center (formerly Cape Canaveral)
in Florida has been sending astronauts into space. Among
them was Neil Armstrong, on his journey to become the first man on the moon.

Public tours and exhibits

The
Kennedy Space Center tours and exhibits are fun and educational - and stir the imagination of young and
old. For example, there is an outdoor museum of rockets standing upright in launch position. Another exhibit
lets you see inside a full-size replica of a Space Shuttle. Other must-sees include a lunar module, genuine
moon rocks, and a shot-in-space film projected on a 5-story screen.

To reach the rocket assembly and launching areas, you board
special Kennedy Space Center buses that take you on a sightseeing circuit.

All the attractions seen on the tour are interesting but the
Apollo / Saturn Center is the highlight of the Kennedy Space Center for many visitors. You see the
now-familiar control room used for the moon flights. And, you view up-close the assembled 110-meter (363-foot)
Apollo 18 moon rocket. It never got off the ground because, before it was launched, NASA decided to scrub the
Apollo program and replace it with the new Space Shuttle program.

Viewing a rocket launch
For a truly uplifting experience, be at the Kennedy Space Center or general Cape Canaveral area on a
rocket-launch day. Seeing live an immensely heavy, thrust-rumbling rocket ship laboring to conquer
gravitational forces is mind-boggling.




 


American cuisine

 
 
 
 



|