Blue Origin’s Crewed Suborbital Launch Delayed Again Due to High Winds
Sandy Verma June 25, 2025 04:24 PM

June 25, 2025Blue Origin’s latest crewed suborbital mission, NS-33has once again been delayed due to adverse weather conditions in West Texas. The mission, which aims to send six civilians to suborbital space aboard the company’s New Shepard rocket, was originally scheduled for Saturday, June 21but high winds forced the launch team to postpone. A second attempt on Sunday morning was also scrubbed for the same reason.

Blue Origin has not yet confirmed when the next launch window will open but said in a social media update that its team is currently “assessing our next launch opportunity.”

13th Human Spaceflight for Blue Origin

As reported by Space.comthe NS-33 mission marks the 33rd overall flight for New Shepard and the company’s 13th human spaceflight. While most of the rocket’s previous missions have focused on uncrewed payloads and research, NS-33 will fly six civilian passengerscontinuing Blue Origin’s efforts to expand commercial spaceflight.

The civilian crew includes:

  • Allie and Carl Kuehnerconservationists and explorers

  • Leland Larsonphilanthropist and beekeeper

  • Freddie Rescigno Jr.entrepreneur

  • Owolabi Salisauthor and attorney

  • Jim Sitkinretired lawyer

About the New Shepard System

The New Shepard system is fully autonomous and reusabledesigned to deliver passengers to suborbital space for a roughly 10 to 12-minute flight. During the experience, passengers enjoy several minutes of weightlessness and stunning views of Earth from the edge of spacebefore the capsule returns safely to the ground under parachutes.

Blue Origin’s first human spaceflight launched in July 2021famously carrying founder Jeff Bezoshis brother Mark, aviation legend Wally Funk, and Dutch student Oliver Daemen.

Weather Remains a Challenge

While the team is eager to resume flights, the delay of NS-33 highlights how even the most advanced spaceflight operations remain at the mercy of Earth’s weather conditions. No new target date has been announced, but NS-33 will be the company’s fourth human spaceflight this yearand expectations remain high for the next attempt.

Pacific Medical Univresity

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