Flying Out of Florida for Thanksgiving? Here’s What Travelers Should Know

Flying Out of Florida for Thanksgiving? Here’s What Travelers Should Know

Tampa International Airport. Credit: Tampa International Airport

Thanksgiving travel is already picking up across the country, and Florida is one of the busiest starting points and destinations. Hundreds of thousands of passengers will pass through Miami, Orlando, and Tampa this week, and that means traffic, crowds, and long lines. A little extra planning makes the difference between a smooth start and a hectic one. Here are some tips and reminders to help you have as stress-free an experience as possible:

New Glenn Booster Returns to Blue Origin’s Cape Canaveral Facility After Historic Landing

New Glenn Booster Returns to Blue Origin’s Cape Canaveral Facility After Historic Landing

Eric A. Moore/FMN
Photo Credit: Eric A. Moore/FMN

A Milestone Journey Home

Less than a week after completing its first successful drone-ship landing on November 13, 2025, Blue Origin’s New Glenn booster made its overland return today, November 20, to the company’s Cape Canaveral facility. The recovered first stage—scorched from reentry and wrapped in protective coverings—arrived at Port Canaveral earlier in the week before beginning this mornings carefully coordinated transport through the port district.

New Glenn arriving at Port Canaveral at dawn.

Blue Origin Announces A Super-Heavy New Glenn Variant

It has been a big week for Blue Origin, first with the second launch of New Glenn, the successful landing of the first stage. As they were moving the first stage of last week’s New Glenn flight, the company casually made three major announcements today in one press release: a new, supersized New Glenn for megapayloads, ramping up the power output of its BE-4 and BE-3U engine used on the second stage of the current New Glenn, as well as the 9X4. It might be a while for the megarocket to be on the launch pad, but the engine advancements start arriving on the next New Glenn flight, NG-3.

New Glenn NG-2 Liftoff, November 13, 2025. Phot: Charles Boyer

NG-2 Launch Signals A Big Win as Blue Origin Enters The Reusable Era

NG-2 lands on drone ship
Blue Origin recovered its New Glenn booster for the first time ever today following a launch from Cape Canaveral. The recovery makes the company only the second in history to develop a reusable booster. Photo: Blue Origin

Blue Origin notched a major success this afternoon as its towering New Glenn rocket roared away from Launch Complex 36, completing the company’s second orbital flight and sending a pair of NASA spacecraft on a long journey toward Mars. The launch, designated NG-2, lifted off at 3:55 p.m. Eastern after a week marked by weather delays, solar activity concerns, and heightened anticipation along Florida’s Space Coast.

Aurora Borealis Lights Up Florida Skies

Aurora Borealis Lights Up Florida Skies

Northen lights over Florida
The famed Northern Lights made a rare appearance over Florida last night. Image: Trevor Thompson / Facebook


It was a sight few Floridians ever expect to see. Late Tuesday night and into the early hours of Wednesday, streaks of soft red and violet light rippled faintly across the northern horizon, visible from as far south as Central Florida. The northern lights — usually reserved for those in Alaska, Canada, or northern Europe — paid a rare visit to the Sunshine State.

NG-2 Encapsulation

Blue Origin Set to Launch Second New Glenn Rocket on November 9

Blue Origin NG-2 Hotfire test
Blue Origin’s second New Glenn rocket underwent a hotfire test earlier this week. Photo: Blue Origin

All eyes will be on Launch Complex 36 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Sunday November 9, 2025.  Blue Origin’s New Glenn heavy lift rocket will attempt to successfully launch NASA’s ESCAPADE mission (NG-2) to an orbit around Mars.

FAA Restricts Launches

FAA Restricts Launches

Launches like Blue Origin’s NG-2 are not subject to the new FAA order, since it is a NASA mission. Photo: Blue Origin

The Federal Aviation Administration announced a big change on November 6, 2025, that will dramatically alter the way commercial rocket launches are conducted in the United States…at least for now. Effective November 10, all commercial launches and reentries will be restricted to nighttime hours between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. local time. The emergency order, described by officials as a necessary response to ongoing staffing shortages, immediately sent ripples through the nation’s growing commercial space industry, particularly across Florida’s Space Coast, where many of the country’s launches take place.

Remote cameras set up, the press and spectators await t-0 and liftoff from Boca Chica for Starship Flight 11. Photo: Chris Leymarie, Florida Media Now

What’s Next For Starship?

Remote cameras set up, the press and spectators await t-0 and liftoff from Boca Chica for Starship Flight 11. Photo: Chris Leymarie, Florida Media Now
Remote cameras set up, the press and spectators await t-0 and liftoff from Boca Chica for Starship Flight 11. Photo: Chris Leymarie, Florida Media Now

Flight 11 was the final launch of the Block 2 variant of Starship.  That mission was promising, and both the Booster and Starship survived and splashed down successfully to their respective targets.

Following this mission, SpaceX won’t be launching Starship for a hot minute, taking some time to make some significant changes to both their facilities at Starbase and the launch vehicles.

NASA Is Working To Solve Critical Space Material Shortage

NASA Is Working To Solve Critical Space Material Shortage

Artist’s representation of a Voyager in deep space. Credit: JPL

For scientific survey probes and landers that head into deep space, power generation is a critical problem: think of exploring space like backpacking across a continent a place like Antarctica: no stores, no roads, and months and months of cold temperatures. Solar power is handy, light and handy, but useless at night or in a blizzard. NASA’s nuclear technology could offer a solution in such scenarios.