She travelled 252,756 miles from Earth — but Sadie didn’t care about any of that. She just wanted her human back.
When NASA astronaut Christina Koch returned from the most extraordinary journey of her life, the welcome that truly melted the internet wasn’t from mission control or the cheering crowds. It was from a four-legged family member who had been waiting patiently at home.
A Mission for the History Books
The Artemis II mission launched on April 1, 2026, and flew by the Moon on April 6, travelling 6,400 miles beyond the Moon’s far side before returning to Earth on April 10, 2026. The first crewed test flight of NASA’s Artemis program carried the first astronauts to travel to the Moon in more than half a century, with the crew completing a record-setting lunar flyby, reaching 252,756 miles at their farthest distance from Earth.
Koch made history as the first woman to leave low Earth orbit and journey around the Moon — a milestone that will be written into the books forever. But it was what happened after splashdown that captured the hearts of dog lovers worldwide.
The Reunion That Broke the Internet
Christina Koch, 47, shared footage of her dog Sadie’s enthusiastic reaction to her return home following the nearly 10-day mission. The video showed Sadie bursting into an excited frenzy when she spotted her owner — running around in circles and grabbing a toy for her.
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Koch shared the video on Instagram, with tail wagging and pure joy from Sadie, who showed zero interest in the fact that her owner had just travelled farther from Earth than almost any human in history.
Koch herself couldn’t resist adding a self-deprecating, deeply relatable caption. “I’m still pretty sure I was the happier side of this reunion,” she wrote, before adding: “Sadie taught me everything I needed to know about being an emotional support animal. Didn’t expect that would come in handy.”
Koch then took Sadie for a run along the beach, and the post quickly gathered thousands of likes and comments.
What the Video Reminded Us All
The video resonated far beyond the space community. For dog owners, the clip needed no explanation — it was the universal language of a dog who simply missed their person, expressed in the most joyful way possible.
Koch herself reflected that it was the “human moments” that gave the journey its deepest meaning — and few moments were more human than being greeted at the door by an overjoyed pup after nearly 10 days away.
Koch had described being awe-struck by the view of Earth from the Moon — “how much blackness there was around it” — and how it “truly emphasized how alike we are, how the same thing keeps every single person on planet Earth alive.” Yet back on the ground, it was the simple, tail-wagging joy of Sadie that brought everything back into perspective.
A Dog’s Love Knows No Distance
For dog parents, this reunion is a reminder of something we already know — no matter how long you’ve been gone, your dog’s love remains as fierce and unconditional as ever. Whether you’ve been away for a day, a week, or orbiting the Moon, the welcome home is always the same: pure, unfiltered, heart-bursting joy.
Christina Koch may have become a pioneer of space exploration, but in Sadie’s eyes, she’s simply the best human in the universe — and that’s more than enough.
Did this reunion make your heart melt? Share this story with every dog parent you know — and give your own furry co-pilot an extra hug today!
DogExpress












in Chandigarh, India. 
