Sex in Space: Has it Happened?
I was talking with a buddy at work the other day and somehow the conversation got on what it would be like to have sex in zero gravity.
That got us to thinking if it has happened already. With co-ed crews on extended missions on the American Shuttles, Russian space flights, and multinational crews on the International Space Station, (ISS) I'm sure the opportunity has presented itself.
But has it happened? You know there would be no official release about it from NASA. Has anyone heard any rumours about this?
Of course sex in zero G would present some challenges and unique opportunities. You would have to be secured someway, because every time you thrust you'd send your partner flying. :D A guy could take his partner around the waist and work her like a fleshlight on his cock, because she wouldn't weigh anything. :cool:
Facials would be tricky, if not out of the question. imagine a Peter North size load jetting out and splashing off a lady's face and then floating around the compartment! :D Swallowing would defiantly be the best thing in space. :)
Any other thoughts?
Not technically Space ( Outer orbit of Earth and beyond )
Yes, Sex has happened in Zero Gravity ( Zero-G )
About a decade ago Miltons PRIVATE magazine did a X-video with some of the scenes shot is Zero-G, Weightless only for a minute or so at a time.
This was done using an aircraft simular to the ones NASA uses for there Astronauts in training.
The aircraft is placed in a nosedive to create the Zero-G weighless effect from a high altitude, then nose up, and repeats the procedure as needed.
PRIVATE chartered the aircraft for a day to do the scenes. I recall there is a company in the U.S. that will take you up in groups for $300.00+ each person
to experiance several minutes of Zero - G.
The famed physicist Stephen Hawking even tried it out ( with some help out of his wheelchair )
Do to the professional nature of the U.S. NASA Astronauts, I doubt they would have done the 'Nasty' on the space shuttle or space station,
although I have no idea if any Russian Cosmonaunts did it during there years in space (unlikely)
Also 'loose' liquids can be a hazard inside a spacecraft, they need to be 'ultra clean' as the tiny floating liquid droplets can end up in any nook or cranny, wiring, electronics etc. and very difficult to 'capture' - Just look at the old Apollo films showing liquid food squeezed out of tubes, they were difficult to handle when ejected in a Zero-G enviorment.
:cool: