Starliner astronaut’s mom: They will ‘return safe and sound’
- Wilmore, Williams to stay at ISS until February 2025
- Pair will return to Earth next year on a SpaceX capsule
- Wiliams' mom unconcerned: 'She is a seasoned astronaut.'
- Wilmore, Williams to stay at ISS until February 2025
- Pair will return to Earth next year on a SpaceX capsule
- Wiliams' mom unconcerned: 'She is a seasoned astronaut.'
(NewsNation) — Bonnie Pandya, the mother of Boeing Starliner astronaut Suni Williams, said in an interview on “CUOMO” that both her daughter and Butch Wilmore are keeping busy and are happy at the International Space Station.
Despite another delay in their return to Earth, Pandya is unconcerned.
“I don’t give her any advice. She knows what to do. She is a seasoned astronaut. She’s been up over 400 days in space,” she said. “So, you know, they have things to do. They have jobs to do. They have experiments.”
The astronauts have been at the ISS since the beginning of June on what was initially expected to be an eight-day mission. After multiple delays from the multinational corporation, they are now slated to return to Earth in February 2025 via a SpaceX capsule, NASA decided.
Pandya said she last spoke to her daughter just two days ago, adding, “She told me not to worry about her. Everything’s going to be fine.”
A series of malfunctions with the ship’s propulsive devices are behind the delays.
“I’ve been an astronaut mom for 20 years, and this is her third flight. Even though it was, you know, it has a problem, we still don’t feel that there’s a big problem,” she said. “They just want to be sure that … they’re safe coming back. So that’s why they decided to keep them up there.”
Pandya has penned a book each time her daughter has stayed in space, beginning with “Little Tail, Big Tales: The Adventures of an Astronaut’s Dog, Gorby and His Two and Four Legged Friends” in 2022.
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