Two of the four astronauts, who recently returned from their successful lunar mission aboard the Artemis II, have strong agricultural roots. Canadian Jeremy Hansen grew up on a farm, while American astronaut Christina Koch spent much of her childhood working on her grandparents’ farm.
A closer look at the backgrounds of the four crew members of the Artemis II spacecraft, which landed safely in Houston, Texas, last week, reveals that mission specialists Canadian Jeremy Hansen and American Christina Koch both had farming experience to draw on.
Along with the other two American crew members, Reid Wiseman and Victor Glover, they now form part of a select elite, bringing the total number of people who have travelled to the Moon and returned safely to Earth to 28.
Hansen grew up on a farm near Ailsa Craig in southern Ontario and has remained grounded despite his stellar achievements. “Nothing I have accomplished I have done alone. We are here in space because of a team around us,” he previously told a Canadian news agency. “It is important that you find your passion, and equally important that you share it with others because they are the ones who are going to help you in this process.”
The 50-year-old astronaut recently shared a photograph of himself on a John Deere 8640 tractor from his family farm, writing: “As an astronaut who grew up on a farm in southern Ontario, the connection between space and agriculture really interests me!”
That connection isn’t just personal – it’s increasingly practical. Advancements in controlled-environment crop production and satellite monitoring are being used both to produce food in space and to improve farming practices on Earth.
Hansen’s fascination with space began early when he saw a photograph of Neil Armstrong in an encyclopaedia. He converted his treehouse into a “rocket” and joined the Canadian Air Cadets at age 12, setting him on a path from rural Ontario to lunar orbit.
‘Farmers just make things work’
Growing up on a farm also played a formative role in Christina Koch’s life. In introducing the crew, NASA highlighted her years spent on her grandparents’ farm.
The trained engineer has worked in extreme environments, including Antarctica. She had long dreamed of becoming an astronaut, with a poster of the iconic “Earthrise” image displayed in her childhood bedroom.
“I always tell people, do what scares you,” she once said of her personal motto.
The 47-year-old Koch holds the record for the longest spaceflight by a woman – 328 days – and also took part in the first all-female spacewalk alongside her colleague Jessica Meir.
As a child, Koch spent long American summer holidays on her grandparents’ farm in Michigan, where she helped both on the farm and at their market, Under the Pines, in Comstock Park north of Wyoming. “It taught me an unwavering work ethic.”
She does not shy away from hard work and credits her farming background with helping her take on complex challenges and find practical solutions.
Canadian Jeremy Hansen posted this photo of himself and a family member on a John Deere 8640 tractor and said there is a strong connection between agriculture and space travel. Their family farm was in southern Ontario, west of Niagara Falls. Photo: Jeremy Hansen/Facebook
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