Three days for the reason that Orion Crew Module (CM) hit the waters of the Pacific Ocean, off California’s Baja Coast, wrapping up the hugely successful Artemis I mission, we’re reminded of the final day that human beings final referred to as the Moon their non permanent house. On 14 December 1972, Apollo 17 Commander Gene Cernan and Lunar Module Pilot (LMP) Harrison “Jack” Schmitt awoke for his or her third and last “morning” on the floor of our closest celestial neighbor.
Launched a week earlier, Cernan and Schmitt spent 75 hours in a fairly little valley referred to as Taurus-Littrow, logged greater than 22 hours strolling throughout its rugged terrain and drove 18 miles (29 kilometers) within the battery-powered Lunar Roving Car (LRV). However on 14 December, 50 years in the past, the astronauts awoke within the cramped confines of Lunar Module (LM), “Challenger”, to the belief that this present day would mark their departure from the Moon and their return to Earth.
Neither man, although, might have imagined in his wildest goals that greater than a half-century would elapse earlier than bootprints would once more dot the lunar floor.

Late the earlier “night”, Cernan had taken humanity’s poignant final steps of the twentieth century. He drove the LRV to a spot a few mile (1.6 kilometers) from Challenger, parked it and configured its tv digital camera to file their liftoff from the Moon. As he dismounted, Cernan paused to carve his daughter Tracy’s initials into the comfortable lunar topsoil. Then he returned to Challenger and clasped the ladder one last time.
“Bob,” he had radioed Capcom Bob Parker in Mission Management, “that is Gene and I’m on the floor. And as I take these final steps from the floor, again house for a while to return, however we imagine not too lengthy into the long run, I imagine historical past will file that America’s problem of at present has cast man’s future of tomorrow…And as we go away the Moon at Taurus-Littrow, we go away as we got here, and God prepared as we will return, with peace and hope for all mankind. Godspeed the crew of Apollo 17.”

Fifty years on, with Cernan and Apollo 17 Command Module Pilot (CMP) Ron Evans having sadly left us, solely ten of the 24 lunar voyagers—and simply 4 Moonwalkers—are nonetheless alive and it will possibly solely be hoped that they are going to be round when the Artemis Team makes its triumphant return to the Moon, later this decade. The world bade farewell to the primary Moonwalker, Neil Armstrong, back in August 2012, and most just lately his Apollo 11 crewmate Mike Collins died in April 2021.
A lot of these pioneers expressed their undisguised angst over time that the glory of Venture Apollo had been unceremoniously deserted in its prime. Quoted by Andrew Chaikin in his landmark ebook A Man on the Moon, Apollo 14 astronaut Stu Roosa as soon as remarked that “historical past won’t be sort to us, as a result of we had been silly”.

Cernan and Schmitt obtained their customary wake-up name on 14 December 1972 within the broom-closet-sized confines of Challenger’s tiny cabin by Capcom Gordon Fullerton. However in fact, each males had been already awake, following a sleepless last night time within the ethereal stillness of the Moon.
Schmitt had loved six hours of fitful sleep, Cernan about 5. “We’re within the midst of a pleasant hamburger omelet,” Cernan chuckled, to which Schmitt added that within the peculiar one-sixth gravity, most of their breakfast ended up throughout them.

It was just a little greater than every week previous to Christmas, so Schmitt sang Fullerton a tune:
It’s the week earlier than Christmas
And all via the LM
Not a commander was stirring
Not even Cernan.

The samples had been stowed of their locations with care
In hopes that, with you, they quickly can be there.
And Gene is in his hammock, and I in my cap,
Had simply settled our brains for a brief lunar nap.

Requested by Fullerton if he had spent all night time composing his masterpiece, Schmitt replied: “Gordy, that’s for the children. They’re the long run.”
These last hours on the Moon had been a flurry of exercise, as Challenger’s hatch was opened one last time to discard unneeded gear. “Cameras, instruments, backpacks and different now-useless materials had been flung to the floor,” Cernan wrote in his memoir, The Final Man on the Moon. “We needed to shed weight if we had been going to get off the Moon safely.

Mission planners had labored out the precise stability wanted and each container of rocks we introduced aboard was weighed on a hand-held fish-scale, calibrated for one-sixth gravity, earlier than being saved. We had simply sufficient gasoline to get us into orbit with nearly no margin for error, so the general weight of the spacecraft, its passengers and cargo of rocks was vital. We threw out almost every thing that wasn’t nailed down.”
Though Cernan and Schmitt preferred to check with this brief session as an Extravehicular Exercise (EVA) in its personal proper—and though Challenger’s cabin strain was lowered to a situation of near-vacuum—they’d not bodily go away the LM once more. As a substitute, they bagged up the “jettison luggage” simply contained in the hatchway and gave them every a hefty kick to ship them simply over the lip of Challenger’s tiny porch.

From there, they’d fall like snowflakes within the low lunar gravity to the floor. Schmitt snickered and referred to as them “Santa Claus luggage”.
A short communications “cross” with crewmate Ron Evans within the orbiting Command and Service Module (CSM) “America” prompted Cernan to remind him to maintain the docking probe prolonged and prepared for his or her arrival. Evans promised that he would.

Lastly, with every thing buttoned up and able to go away, the final human explorers of the Moon bade farewell to Taurus-Littrow at 188 hours into the 13-day Apollo 17 mission. “Let’s get this mom outta right here,” Cernan radioed, in what would show to be among the last phrases—up to now—to be spoken by people on one other celestial physique.
Inside a matter of minutes, Challenger’s ascent stage had achieved a low lunar orbit and shortly thereafter made an ideal docking with a really blissful Evans. A number of days later, on 19 December, America splashed down within the Pacific Ocean, closing out the primary chapter of humanity’s exploration of the Moon.

And because the Artemis Era appears set to return there a number of brief years from now, it’s unattainable to not be reminded of Gene Cernan’s final phrases on the floor of the Moon:
God prepared…
We will return…
Sometime.