Wednesday, 4 April 2018

March meeting presented by Dr. Geoff Steeves

The March COPA Flight 6 meeting was a presentation by Dr. Geoff Steeves.

Most people will likely never meet someone who wants to be an astronaut or even a physicist. If you become a physicist, you will spend your life conducting scientific research. Dr. Steeves specializes in ultrafast microscopy at the University of Victoria. If you're not sure what this is, I encourage you to look it up on the internet.

Now back to the astronaut part. Geoff had a dream of flying airplanes at a very young age. Taken by the science fiction character, Han Solo and Star Wars movies, Geoff's dream was to leave the lower atmosphere and head to outer space.

Back in the year 2009, the Canada Space Agency put out an advertisement looking for Canada's next astronaut. Geoff completed his commercial pilot licence on the final day that CSA was accepting applications. After his application was accepted, a year long process of paring down the list for Canada's top pilot began. The process started with 5000 applications and was quickly dropped to 1000, then to about 40. The remaining candidates consisted of pilots, doctors, scientists and even an Olympic athlete. These 40 candidates were taken to CSA headquarters in Montreal PQ for aptitude testing.

From there, much of the process revolved around health and fitness testing, and the highlight was the Canadarm2 training. Each candidate was given the opportunity to move this integral part of the Space Station, albeit a facsimile on earth. Next, it was off to Halifax for dunker practice (think helicopter egress training over and over) along with firefighting training, HAZMAT training, and trying to seal burst pipes with virtual duct tape, not quite but almost the same result when something is under considerable pressure. Working in assigned teams, this chaotic exercise is being performed above your head while very cold water is spraying on your face and entire body. No pressure here and no pun intended. As Geoff commented, "The hardest part of these exercises was having to evaluate your fellow team members once it was all over as to how well they performed." Should something catastrophic happen 400 kilometers above earth, you want the best team members on your side.

After Halifax it was off to Toronto for more medical and psychological exams. Once this testing was over it was time to introduce the final 16 candidates to the media. As Geoff says, "This is when it really started to sink in that you had pretty good odds of making the final cut of two."

Geoff was born in Halifax, raised in Edmonton, and calls Victoria home. From television reporters to radio and print reporters, everyone was at the unveiling having any connection to Geoff’s past, all laying claim to this young fellow wanting to blast off into outer space one day. Although Geoff wasn't chosen in the final selection, it was a most rewarding experience and one he will cherish for the rest of his life. Geoff has a love of flying and has fond memories of the process and keeps in touch with many of the people he met during the year long journey. He continues to be involved with human space exploration and tele-robotics. Thanks Geoff for sharing your amazing story.

COPA Flight 6 meets the first Tuesday of the month at 7:00 PM at the Victoria Flying Club, and the next COPA Flight 6 meeting will be Tuesday, April 3rd. Captain Rob Shemilt is away this month, but in his absence, Co-Captain Allan Rempel will talk about the Civil Air Search and Rescue Association (CASARA) and the Western Canada SAR Exercise that was held in La Ronge, SK in August 2017, including the eventful trips there and back. The SAREX was a large-scale 11-plane exercise which made extensive use of Foreflight, and the transits through the mountains were challenging because of both smoke and weather.