50 years ago this month, Russia shot the first man into space.
Since Yuri Gagarin traveled solo, we can’t blame him for not hooking up.
But, in the 50 years since, Earthlings appear to have never carnally enjoyed each other’s company while orbiting the Earth. This, despite the fact Russia sent the first woman — Valentina Tereshkova – into orbit in 1963.

He didn't have sex in space, but the first human to return safely to Earth got quite a hug from Fidel Castro.
It seems unbelievable, but Russia today rejected the notion that a cosmonaut ever participated in secret sexual experiments.
“There is no official or unofficial evidence that there were instances of sexual intercourse or the carrying out of sexual experiments in space,” Valery Bogomolov, the deputy director of the Moscow-based Institute of Biomedical Problems, told Interfax news agency. “At least, in the history of Russian or Soviet space exploration, this most certainly was not the case.”
“As for American space exploration, well, I just don’t have the information to categorically deny that,” said Bogomolov. “There are just anecdotal rumors, which are not worth trusting.”
According to hasty web research, no American astronauts have entered the 250,000 mile club.
The best I can tell, the U.S. never sent mixed-gender crews to Skylab (1973-1974), but Russia’s Mir housed several women during its 15-year working life.
There’s been plenty of opportunity aboard the International Space Station, but there’s a ban on sex there.
“We are a group of professionals,” said Alan Poindexter, a NASA commander in 2010 when asked about the consequences if astronauts boldly went where no others have been.
“We treat each other with respect and we have a great working relationship. Personal relationships are not … an issue,” said a serious-faced Mr Poindexter. “We don’t have them and we won’t.”
Captain Kirk, we need you.
32 comments Add your comment
Harrison Dangler
April 23rd, 2011
9:17 am
How do you think Buzz Aldren got his nickname?
Gillda
April 23rd, 2011
9:18 am
There’s really no need for a “ban” at all. Sex between humans in a weightless environment would be so difficult and require so much time and work to obtain the neurological state required that nobody may ever want to have sex in space. In fact, the culmination of sex may be impossible in space.
AmVet
April 23rd, 2011
9:30 am
That 9:15 was obviously posted by an idiot and Luddite who is still living in the 1950s.
Thank gawd NASA never used people like him, or we’d never have gotten off of the ground.
?
April 23rd, 2011
9:44 am
PETER GRIFFEN pulled one off in space and said it was kind of like living in a snow globe
Chuck
April 23rd, 2011
9:57 am
I, for one, would: (a) like to believe we’ve had sex in space and (b) rather not hear about it, especially not tabloid-style.
brad
April 23rd, 2011
10:11 am
Hey, AmVet…space travel is not specifically authorized in the constitution, so our 9:15 friend MUST be right. Far right.
quinc
April 23rd, 2011
10:31 am
The mention of the Constitution brings up interesting points. Neither the Bible or the Constitution allow for space travel. So I suspect that, being in a fundemantally lawless and unrecognized environment, One could gamble and screw as much as they want. Perhaps Congress should make some regulations on it.
KevinM
April 23rd, 2011
11:51 am
So that pay-for movie wasn’t really from a real space station?
Name (required)
April 23rd, 2011
12:20 pm
We don’t need to test sex in space. We have enough teabagging going on on the Earth.
chastity belt
April 23rd, 2011
12:29 pm
So you’re saying that Van Allen is not so much a radiation belt as it is a chastity belt?
score!