What a blast! Huddersfield family live the American dream at Atlantis space shuttle launch

The Howard family walk along the Max Brewer Bridge before the launch of space shuttle Atlantis
The Howard family walk along the Max Brewer Bridge before the launch of space shuttle Atlantis

TWO Huddersfield families joined hundreds of thousands of people at the launch of a space shuttle.

And they ended up making the news themselves.

Brothers Phil and Ryan Howard had always wanted to see a space shuttle launch and bought their own space suits as Atlantis thundered into orbit.

But they were the only ones to dress up and found themselves surrounded by hundreds of TV camera crews and tourists wanting to take photographs of them.

Phil, 33, was joined by daughter Aimee Howard and Gillian Betony, of Salendine Nook, and Ryan, 30, with girlfriend Charlotte Saxon and sons Josh and Jay Howard from Meltham.

They were among a crowd of more than one million people to watch Atlantis and four astronauts take off on NASA’s last space shuttle voyage.

Phil, who runs Huddersfield-based Web EDI, said: “Myself and Ryan have always wanted to see a space shuttle launch since we were kids.

“We only noticed on the NASA website a week ago that the space shuttle launch was happening on July 8, so at very short notice we managed to book time off work, flights and visas.”

They arrived just in time and went straight to the Kennedy Space Center in Orlando Florida, where they had a go on the launch simulator.

There they decided to buy space suits to wear for the historic event, which meant they certainly stood out from the crowd.

Phil added: “We took the hire car to Max Brewer Bridge, Titusville, where the seven of us walked through the crowd in our orange NASA space suits.

“To our surprise, nobody else had dressed up at all, and hence, we stole the show and relished every minute of it.”

Their 15 minutes of fame turned into two hours of giving interviews to the American media and they’re bound to feature on the holiday snaps of thousands of onlookers.

Phil added: “We would have been lucky to get 15 mins of fame – we ended up with about two hours of ‘awesome’, ‘can we take your photo?’ and literally 360 degrees of people taking snaps every couple of steps.

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