The astronaut who took one giant leap for Manx-kind

Catherine NicollIsle of Man
News imageBBC Nicole Stott, who has long brown hair and is wearing dark rimmed glasses and a dark jacket and top with a green and yellow pendant round her neck. images from stamps are on the screen behind her.BBC
Nicole Stott took part in two space missions in 2009 and 2011

A retired NASA astronaut has said her experiences had made her realise that people living on Earth were crewmates and needed to look after the planet together.

Nicole Stott spent 104 days in space across two missions, performed a spacewalk, and became the first person to speak Manx as well as paint in watercolours in space.

As part of her training, she spent 18 days as an aquanaut living in an undersea habitat.

Stott has recently contributed to a special collection of stamps put together by the Isle of Man Post Office, providing a series of essays to accompany a set to images straddling both space and deep sea.

She said, following both experiences, her perception of life back on Earth and the need to protect the planet had been heightened. Stott said being in space "does make you look at Earth differently".

"I always had an appreciation for our planet – I don't know that on a daily basis I was thinking about the fact that I live on a planet in space – and when I got to space, looking out the window, there's no denying that, right?

"You're like, holy moly, we live on a planet in space."

It was "grounding", she said, "to make that connection to our planetary home".

News imageIOM POST OFFICE A stamp featuring a section the Earth from space featuring the Isle of Man. it has Isle of Man and From the Oceans to the Stars.IOM POST OFFICE
The stamps feature an image of the Isle of Man from space
News imageIOM POST OFFICE A stamp featuring a large portion of the view of Earth from space. It is blue against a black background.IOM POST OFFICE
The From the Oceans to the Stars collection features six stamps

American-born Stott is married to Manxman Chris Stott, who is a leader in the satellite industry.

Her experiences working closely with others both in space and deep underwater had highlighted the need for people to work together to look after the planet.

She said: "I really feel like we need to remind ourselves of how important it is to be crewmates on our planetary spaceship too.

"To take care of it, to understand our relationship with it, and yeah, to be crewmates not passengers."

News imageIOM POST OFFICE A stamp featuring white humpback whale under the surface with ripples in the surface above it.IOM POST OFFICE
Images from beneath the waves also feature in the collection
News imageIOM POST OFFICE A stamp featuring a glass octopus, which is a translucent blue with bright yellow dots shining through. IOM POST OFFICE
Life from the deep sea also illustrates the collection

Stott said the images chosen for the From the Oceans to the Stars stamp set deliberately had a "very otherworldly feel".

"I wanted to do that purposely because I think that helps us make connections to things we might not have raised our awareness to that are around us," she said.

She said the collection was "really meant to get us thinking about our place on this ocean planet in space, and how everything is interconnected - from the deepest part of the ocean to the farthest reaches of our universe - it's all connected in some way."

However, she said "What I like to think, though, is that you don't need to leave the planet to appreciate it.

"We're in this really beautiful place on the Isle of Man.

"Everywhere you look, in every direction, there's something awesome and wonderful to take in.

"I think if we open our hearts and our minds to that, it'll ground us again, too, in this reality of living on a planet in space."

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