Today was the day to visit the Kennedy Space Center right up the road from Jetty Park campground.
We had visited its gift shop two years ago during our stay but this was the chance to see the exhibits and movies again. We've done that twice in the last 25 years but it was time for a refresh. Bought the tickets online last night, had the email with the QR codes on my phone so we were good to go.
For two adult with fees, etc. KSC is about $60 per person plus a $10 parking fee.

The KSC bus tour to the Apollo/Saturn V command building was included with admission but today (Tuesday) was only the SECOND DAY this had run since being closed for a full year due to the pandemic (will not say its name). So we rode the bus, saw the Saturn V, and some more great stuff that had been under lock and key for a year since yesterday.
We got there about 1030am (10am rope drop) and the choices were a little overwhelming at first.
I am a space nerd and follow SpaceX and the other (laggards) faithfully (Blue Origin, Boeing, etc.) so I was in my element and DW was along to make sure I didn't go full out-on-the-ledge-nerdy.
First thing we settle on to see was the Space Shuttle Atlantis. There are only 4 retired Orbiters (if you count the glider Enterprise) and Atlantis did 33 missions in 28 years. I worked with a lady during my career who was the wife of a Shuttle Mission Specialist out of Huntsville, AL so I was aware that very (smart) real people flew in space and ran those missions.
Atlantis is there at KSC and very well presented.
In a prior life at Pratt & Whitney, I shared a desk quad (4 person desk area) with an engineer who was working on a Space Shuttle Main Engine replacement (the engines on the orbiter in the first round were junk and had to be replaced after each mission - hardly "resuable"). But his team job was to develop one that could be reused. Wish I knew how it turned out for him....
One thing I came away with after seeing an Orbiter this close is the "texture" of the skin. The white tiles look smooth in videos but they have a fabric/weave look/texture about them.
Panorama of an open Atlantis.
How about DW's preferred view (backseat driver)?
Never knew the Shuttles had that "kick plate" to protect their engine nozzle on the rear but guess that protected them from particle damage during touchdown/rollout.
Of course, what DIS Camping trip report would be complete if you didn't include the Astronaut RV (AirStream) that carried the astronauts to the launchpad.
I remember 1981 when the first shuttle mission took off with Crippen and Young as the crew. Atlantis flew the last shuttle mission in 2011. Not bad for 1970s technology.
The bus tour in the next post.
Bama Ed