Published on Oct. 16, 2025, 6:04 PM

An average of 200 to 400 tracked objects, also referred to as ‘space junk,’ enter Earth’s atmosphere annually.

People in a rural west Texas community got quite the surprise earlier this month when a car-sized piece of equipment landed unexpectedly on a farm.

In a Facebook post, Ann Vincent Walter says she saw a large parachute hovering above her home on October 2. She initially thought it was a weather balloon, but when she took a video and sent it to her parents, he father said it didn’t look like one and suggested she call the county sheriff’s office.

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Ann says she initally thought the equipment (pictured here in the sky, prior to landing) was a weather balloon. (Facebook/Ann Vincent Walter)

“I called the Hale County sheriff’s office and explained what we saw,” Ann says in her Facebook post.

“They thanked me for informing them, [and said] a NASA team was currently trying to find and retrieve their piece of equipment.”

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NASA said the equipment had blown off course. (Facebook/Ann Vincent Walter)

She was told a NASA rep would be contacting her for more information, adding that the object was a “large piece of experimental equipment attached to a parachute.”

NASA told her the equipment, which was launched from the Fort Sumner launch facility, had blown off course.