Reminder that 'The Dish' in Parkes was not the main game in 1969 and still isn't in 2026.

"The heavy lifting on Australia’s side of the Artemis II mission will be done by the Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex (CDSCC), part of Nasa’s Deep Space Network (DSN), which is run by the national science agency the CSIRO.

"The CDSCC, then known as the Tidbinbilla deep space tracking station, was somewhat sidelined in The Dish, as was the Honeysuckle Creek tracking station, which actually captured the initial images of Armstrong before Parkes took over."

#Artemis #Apollo11 #Tidbinbilla #Canberra
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2026/apr/02/humans-are-en-route-to-the-moon-for-the-first-time-in-54-years-and-australias-dish-is-tracking-them

Humans are en route to the moon for the first time in 54 years – and Australia’s Dish is tracking them

The Murriyang radio telescope in Parkes, NSW broadcast the moon landing in 1969 and is now observing the Artemis II lunar mission

The Guardian

for anyone who wants to understand the full story, this is a fascinating read https://andrewtink.com/index.php/honeysuckle-creek-new

#Canberra #Apollo11

Honeysuckle

Andrew Tink

@luciedigitalni https://www.honeysucklecreek.net/station/index.html Anyone that wants to do a deep dive on the Apollo era technical equipment might like this site.
The Station

@luciedigitalni A lot of misconceptions around this, as you say. Even someone on the telly yesterday was promulgating howlers.
@luciedigitalni I had a series of prints by Heather Burness from her Honeysuckle Interference series on my office wall when I was in the Assembly. Art is a good way to remember there are things that are bigger and longer lasting than the moment we’re in.
https://www.heatherburness.com/recent-works
Recent Works — Heather Burness

An Australian artist and printer working as Grey Lady Press. Heather's art practice focuses on ephemeral phenomena and place

Heather Burness