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The teddy bear 35km (22m) above the Earth

What happens when you send a teddy bear to space?

Pocklington School send stuffed toy to space with 'selfie cam' to record footage of its journey 22 miles above Earth

Posted by Stephanie Broad | September 16, 2016 | School life

A teddy bear blasted into space by pupils at Pocklington Prep School has returned home battered – but with some thrilling footage from his adventure into the stratosphere. 

The bear, known as Major William Wilberforce, soared 36km (22 miles) above Earth beneath a helium weather balloon, before plummeting back down at an initial acceleration of 9.81m (32 feet) per second once the balloon had burst.   

The school has used the footage from Major William’s onboard selfie cam to make a short film of his heroic journey, noting the equivalent heights of various landmarks passed during his 108-minute ascent and giving pupils some thrilling views of Earth from above. 

 

Fortunately for Major William, his ignominious crash back down to Earth in a barley field 16 miles away from the launch site, and his subsequent tussle with a combine harvester, wasn’t captured by the camera.  

A failure in his GPS tracking system meant the bear lay unnoticed in a field in Raywell, west of Hull, for 50 days, until being spotted by farmer Richard Thompson, who happens to be a former Pocklington School pupil. He said: “I spotted the little teddy bear and his parachute as I was about to go over it with the combine. When I read the labels and realized he was from my old school, it was quite a surprise.  

“I’m glad he landed in my field because he could easily have landed somewhere inaccessible and never been seen again. I was pleased to be able to get him back to the school.”  

The teddy bear throughout his journey into space

Patrick Allen, Pocklington Prep School’s Head of ICT and 'Mission Controller', documented Major William’s adventure in the 13-minute account of the mission, SPACEBEAR The Movie.  

He said: “Our pupils were so excited to hear Major William had survived to tell the tale. We had a worrying few weeks when transmission was lost, so there was huge relief that he, and his footage, survived.  

“The space project has inspired real enthusiasm in the children. They were involved in every step of the mission’s preparation and to see it come to fruition so successfully is invaluable educationally."        

www.pocklingtonschool.com

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