LOG ENTRY: SOL 79
Itโs the evening of my eighth day on the road. Sirius 4 has been a success so far. Iโve fallen into a routine. Every morning I wake up at dawn. First thing I do is check oxygen and CO2ย levels. Then I eat a breakfast pack and drink a cup of
water. After that, I brush my teeth, using as little water as possible, and shave with an electric razor.
The rover has no toilet. We were expected to use our suitsโ reclamation systems for that. But they arenโt designed to hold twenty daysโ worth of output.
My morning piss goes in a resealable plastic box. When I open it, the rover reeks like a truck-stop menโs room. I could take it outside and let it boil off. But I worked hard to make that water, and the last thing Iโm going to do is waste it. Iโll feed it to the water reclaimer when I get back.
Even more precious is my manure. Itโs critical to the potato farm, and Iโm the only source on Mars. Fortunately, when you spend a lot of time in space, you learn how to shit in a bag. And if you think things are bad after opening the piss box, imagine the smell after I drop anchor.
After Iโm done with that lovely routine, I go outside and collect the solar cells. Why didnโt I do it the previous night? Because trying to dismantle and stack solar cells inย total darknessย isnโt fun. I learned that the hard way.
After securing the cells, I come back in, turn on some shitty seventies music, and start driving. I putter along at 25 kph, the roverโs top speed. Itโs comfortable inside. I wear hastily made cutoffs and a thin shirt while the RTG bakes the interior. When it gets too hot I detach the insulation duct-taped to the hull. When it gets too cold, I tape it back up.
I can go almost two hours before the first battery runs out. I do a quick EVA to swap cables, then Iโm back at the wheel for the second half of the dayโs drive. The terrain is very flat. The undercarriage of the rover is taller than any of
the rocks around here, and the hills are gently sloping affairs, smoothed by eons
of sandstorms.
When the other battery runs out, itโs time for another EVA. I pull the solar cells off the roof and lay them on the ground. For the first few sols, I lined them up in a row. Now I plop them wherever, trying to keep them close to the rover
out of sheer laziness.
Then comes the incredibly dull part of my day. I sit around for twelve hours with nothing to do. And Iโm getting sick of this rover. The insideโs the size of a van. That may seem like plenty of room, but try being trapped in a van for eight days. I look forward to tending my potato farm in the wide open space of the Hab.
Iโm nostalgic for the Hab. How fucked up is that?
I have shitty seventies TV to watch, and a bunch of Poirot novels to read. But mostly I spend my time thinking about getting to Ares 4. Iโll have to do it someday. How the hell am I going to survive a 3200-kilometer trip in this thing? Itโll probably take fifty days. Iโll need the water reclaimer and the oxygenator, maybe some of the Habโs main batteries, then a bunch more solar cells to charge everything.โฆ Where will I put it all? These thoughts pester me throughout the long, boring days.
Eventually, it gets dark and I get tired. I lie among the food packs, water tanks, extra O2ย tank, piles of CO2ย filters, box of pee, bags of shit, and personal items. I have a bunch of crew jumpsuits to serve as bedding, along with my
blanket and pillow. Basically, I sleep in a pile of junk every night.
Speaking of sleepโฆGโnight.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 80
By my reckoning, Iโm about 100 kilometers fromย Pathfinder. Technically itโs โCarl Sagan Memorial Station.โ But with all due respect to Carl, I can call it whatever the hell I want. Iโm the King of Mars.
As I mentioned, itโs been a long, boring drive. And Iโm still on the outward leg. But hey, Iโm an astronaut. Long-ass trips are my business.
Navigation is tricky.
The Habโs nav beacon only reaches 40 kilometers, so itโs useless to me out here. I knew thatโd be an issue when I was planning this little road trip, so I came up with a brilliant plan that didnโt work.
The computer has detailed maps, so I figured I could navigate by landmarks. I was wrong. Turns out you canโt navigate by landmarks if you canโt find any god damned landmarks.
Our landing site is at the delta of a long-gone river. NASA chose it because if there are any microscopic fossils to be had, itโs a good place to look. Also, the water would have dragged rock and soil samples from thousands of kilometers away. With some digging, we could get a broad geological history.
Thatโs great for science, but it means the Habโs in aย featureless wasteland.
I considered making a compass. The rover has plenty of electricity, and the med kit has a needle. Only one problem: Mars doesnโt have a magnetic field.
So I navigate by Phobos. It whips around Mars so fast it actually rises and sets twice a day, running west to east. It isnโt the most accurate system, but it works.
Things got easier on Sol 75. I reached a valley with a rise to the west. It had flat ground for easy driving, and I just needed to follow the edge of the hills. I named it โLewis Valleyโ after our fearless leader. Sheโd love it there, geology nerd that she is.
Three sols later, Lewis Valley opened into a wide plain. So, again, I was left without references and relied on Phobos to guide me. Thereโs probably symbolism there. Phobos is the god of fear, and Iโm letting it be my guide. Not a good sign.
But today, my luck finally changed. After two sols wandering the desert, I found something to navigate by. It was a five-kilometer crater, so small it didnโt even have a listed name. But it was on the maps, so to me it was the Lighthouse of Alexandria. Once I had it in sight, I knew exactly where I was.
Iโm camped near it now, as a matter of fact.
Iโm finally through the blank areas of the map. Tomorrow, Iโll have the Lighthouse to navigate by, and Hamelin crater later on. Iโm in good shape.
Now on to my next task: sitting around with nothing to do for twelve hours. I better get started!
LOG ENTRY: SOL 81
Almost made it toย Pathfinderย today, but I ran out of juice. Just another 22 kilometers to go!
An unremarkable drive. Navigation wasnโt a problem. As Lighthouse receded into the distance, the rim of Hamelin crater came into view.
I left Acidalia Planitia behind a long time ago. Iโm well into Ares Vallis now. The desert plains are giving way to bumpier terrain, strewn with ejecta that never got buried by sand. It makes driving a chore; I have to pay more attention.
Up till now, Iโve been driving right over the rock-strewn landscape. But as I travel farther south, the rocks are getting bigger and more plentiful. I have to go around some of them or risk damage to my suspension. The good news is I donโt have to do it for long. Once I get toย Pathfinder, I can turn around and go the other way.
The weatherโs been very good. No discernible wind, no storms. I think I got
lucky there. Thereโs a good chance my rover tracks from the past few sols are intact. I should be able to get back to Lewis Valley just by following them.
After setting up the solar panels today, I went for a little walk. I never left sight of the rover; the last thing I want to do is get lost on foot. But I couldnโt stomach crawling back into that cramped, smelly ratโs nest. Not right away.
Itโs a strange feeling. Everywhere I go, Iโm the first. Step outside the rover? First guy ever to be there! Climb a hill? First guy to climb that hill! Kick a rock? That rock hadnโt moved in a million years!
Iโm the first guy to drive long-distance on Mars. The first guy to spend more than thirty-one sols on Mars. The first guy to grow crops on Mars. First, first, first!
I wasnโt expecting to be first at anything. I was the fifth crewman out of the MDV when we landed, making me the seventeenth person to set foot on Mars. The egress order had been determined years earlier. A month before launch, we all got tattoos of our โMars numbers.โ Johanssen almost refused to get her โ15โ because she was afraid it would hurt. Hereโs a woman who had survived the centrifuge, the vomit comet, hard-landing drills and 10k runs. A woman who fixed a simulated MDV computer failure while being spun around upside-down. But she was afraid of a tattoo needle.
Man, I miss those guys.
Jesus Christ, Iโd give anything for a five-minute conversation with anyone.
Anyone, anywhere. About anything.
Iโm the first person to be alone on an entire planet.
Okay, enough moping. Iย amย having a conversation with someone: whoever reads this log. Itโs a bit one-sided but itโll have to do. I might die, but damn it, someone will know what I had to say.
And the whole point of this trip is to get a radio. I could be reconnected with mankind before I even die.
So hereโs another first: Tomorrow Iโll be the first person to recover a Mars probe.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 82
Victory! I found it!
I knew I was in the right area when I spotted Twin Peaks in the distance. The two small hills are under a kilometer from the landing site. Even better, they were on the far side of the site. All I had to do was aim for them until I found the lander.
And there it was! Right where it was supposed to be! I excitedly stumbled out
and rushed to the site.
Pathfinderโs final stage of descent was a balloon-covered tetrahedron. The balloons absorbed the impact of landing. Once it came to rest, they deflated, and the tetrahedron unfolded to reveal the probe.
Itโs actually two separate components. The lander itself, and the Sojourner rover. The lander was immobile, while Sojourner wandered around and got a good look at the local rocks. Iโm taking both back with me, but the important part is the lander. Thatโs the part that can communicate with Earth.
I canโt explain how happy I was to find it. It was aย lotย of work to get here, and Iโd succeeded.
The lander was half-buried. With some quick and careful digging, I exposed the bulk of it, though the large tetrahedron and the deflated balloons still lurked below the surface.
After a quick search, I found Sojourner. The little fella was only two meters from the lander. I vaguely remember it was farther away when they last saw it. It probably entered a contingency mode and started circling the lander, trying to communicate.
I quickly deposited Sojourner in my rover. Itโs small, light, and easily fit in the airlock. The lander was a different story.
I had no hope of getting the whole thing back to the Hab. It was just too big, but I only needed the probe itself. It was time for me to put on my mechanical engineer hat.
The probe was on the central panel of the unfolded tetrahedron. The other three sides were each attached to the central panel with a metal hinge. As anyone at JPL will tell you, probes are delicate things. Weight is a serious concern, so theyโre not made to stand up to much punishment.
When I took a crowbar to the hinges, they popped right off!
Then things got difficult. When I tried to lift the central panel assembly, it didnโt budge.
Just like the other three panels, the central panel had deflated balloons underneath it.
Over the decades, the balloons had ripped and filled with sand.
I could cut off the balloons, but Iโd have to dig to get to them. It wouldnโt be hard, itโs just sand. But the other three panels were in the damn way.
I quickly realized I didnโt give a crap about the condition of the other panels. I went back to my rover, cut some strips of Hab material, then braided them into a primitive but strong rope. I canโt take credit for it being strong. Thank NASA for that. I just made it rope-shaped.
I tied one end to a panel and the other to the rover. The rover was made for traversing extremely rugged terrain, often at steep angles. It may not be fast, but it has great torque. I towed the panel away like a redneck removing a tree stump.
Now I had a place to dig. As I exposed each balloon, I cut it off. The whole task took an hour.
Then I hoisted the central panel assembly up and carried it confidently to the rover!
At least, thatโs what I wanted to do. The damn thing is still heavy as hell. Iโm guessing itโs 200 kilograms. Even in Marsโs gravity thatโs a bit much. I could carry it around the Hab easily enough, but lifting it while wearing an awkward EVA suit? Out of the question.
So I dragged it to the rover.
Now for my next feat: getting it on the roof.
The roof was empty at the moment. Even with mostly full batteries, I had set up the solar cells when I stopped. Why not? Free energy.
Iโd worked it out in advance. On the way here, two stacks of solar panels occupied the whole roof. On the way back, Iโll use a single stack to make room for the probe. Itโs a little more dangerous; the stack might fall over. Also, the cells will be a pain in the ass to stack that high. But Iโll get it done.
I canโt just throw a rope over the rover and hoistย Pathfinderย up the side. I donโt want to break it. I mean, itโs already broken; they lost contact in 1997. But I donโt want to break itย more.
I came up with a solution, but Iโd done enough physical labor for one day, and I was almost out of daylight.
Now Iโm in the rover, looking at Sojourner. It seems all right. No physical damage on the outside. Doesnโt look like anything got too baked by the sunlight. The dense layer of Mars crap all over it protected it from long-term solar damage.
You may think Sojourner isnโt much use to me. It canโt communicate with Earth. Why do I care about it?
Because it has a lot of moving parts.
If I establish a link with NASA, I can talk to them by holding a page of text up to the landerโs camera. But how would they talk to me? The only moving parts on the lander are the high-gain antenna (which would have to stay pointed at Earth) and the camera boom. Weโd have to come up with a system where NASA could talk by rotating the camera head. It would be painfully slow.
But Sojourner has six independent wheels that rotate reasonably fast. Itโll be
much easier to communicate with those. I could draw letters on the wheels. NASA could rotate them to spell things at me.
That all assumes I can get the landerโs radio working at all.
Time to turn in. Iโve got a lot of backbreaking physical labor to do tomorrow.
Iโll need my rest.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 83
Oh God, Iโm sore.
But itโs the only way I could think of to get the lander safely onto the roof. I built a ramp out of rocks and sand. Just like the ancient Egyptians did.
And if thereโs one thing Ares Vallis has, itโs rocks!
First, I experimented to find out how steep the grade could be. I piled some rocks near the lander and dragged it up the pile and back down again. Then I made the pile steeper and made sure I could drag the lander up and down. I repeated this over and over until I found the best grade for my ramp: 30 degrees. Anything more was too risky. I might lose my grip and send the lander tumbling down the ramp.
The roof of the rover is over two meters from the ground. So Iโd need a ramp almost four meters long. I got to work.
The first few rocks were easy. Then they started feeling heavier and heavier. Hard physical labor in a space suit is murder. Everythingโs more effort because youโre lugging 20 kilograms of suit around with you, and your movement is limited. I was panting within twenty minutes.
So I cheated. I upped my O2ย mixture. It really helped a lot. Probably shouldnโt make that a habit. Also, I didnโt get hot. The suit leaks heat faster than my body could ever generate it. The heating system is what keeps the
temperature bearable. My physical labor just meant the suit didnโt have to heat
itself as much.
After hours of grueling labor, I finally got the ramp made. Nothing more than a pile of rocks against the rover, but it reached the roof.
I stomped up and down the ramp first, to make sure it was stable, then I dragged the lander up. It worked like a charm!
I was all smiles as I lashed the lander in place. I made sure it was firmly secured, and even stacked the solar cells in a big single stack (why waste the ramp?).
But then it hit me. The ramp would collapse as I drove away, and the rocks might damage the wheels or undercarriage. Iโd have to take the ramp apart to
keep that from happening.
Ugh.
Tearing the ramp down was easier than putting it up. I didnโt need to carefully put each rock in a stable place. I just dropped them wherever. It only took me an hour.
And now Iโm done!
Iโll start heading home tomorrow, with my new 200-kilogram broken radio.