European Space Agency astronaut Alexander Gerst returned to Earth for the second time on Wednesday after leaving the International Space Station (ISS) with Sergey Prokopyev of Roscosmos and Serena Aunon-Chancellor of NASA.
Gerst had been part of ISS expeditions 40 and 41 from May to November 2014, and went back up to the space station in June.
Live footage of the landing showed Gerst smiling as he was retrieved from the capsule.
"I'm looking forward to flying home and seeing my family for Christmas," he told reporters. "But the mission isn't over yet, we still have to evaluate the results."
Coming home via Kazakhstan
The three descending astronauts landed at 11:02 a.m. (0502 UTC) on Thursday southeast of the remote town of Dzhezkazgan in Kazakhstan.
Welcome home @Astro_Alex! Looking good after six months living and working in space. #Horizons pic.twitter.com/zxkshSBn8Q
— ESA (@esa) December 20, 2018
The trio has been round the earth 3,152 times and traveled 83.3 million miles (134 million kilometers) over the 197 days of their mission.
They were to travel together by helicopter to a recovery staging area in southern Kazakhstan before going their separate ways home.
'I will miss this place'
Space station residents held a change-of-command ceremony with Gerst handing over to Oleg Kononenko of Roscosmos on Wednesday afternoon.
The 42-year-old Gerst — now a European Space Agency record holder with a total of 362 days in space — sent out a series of messages on Twitter, including lines by German-born American poet Charles Bukowski: "There is a place in the heart that will never be filled. A space."
"There is a place in the heart that will never be filled. A space. And even during the best moments, and the greatest times, we will know it. We will know it more than ever. There is a place in the heart that will never be filled & we will wait and wait in that space" C. Bukowski pic.twitter.com/LI5DItDoAD
— Alexander Gerst (@Astro_Alex) December 19, 2018
Gerst, born in Künzelsau, in the southern German state of Baden-Württemberg, also included a message to his not-yet-born grandchildren. He apologized for the state of the planet and its resources left by his generation but told them how wonderful it was to be just three people on a spaceship looking at the millions on distant Earth below.
"I will miss this place," he wrote.
Botschaft an meine Enkelkinder. Hi-res: https://t.co/95ROq4F40g pic.twitter.com/L1uvNZOm5B
— Alexander Gerst (@Astro_Alex) December 19, 2018