You can fly to the moon, but you still can't escape paperwork. Over the last week, astronaut Buzz Aldrin -- the second man to set foot on the moon in 1969 -- has been tweeting some of the mundane forms from his historic Apollo 11 journey.
Aldrin shared the below customs declaration form that he, Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins signed upon arriving in Honolulu following their Pacific splashdown. Like responsible travelers, they declared that they were bringing samples of "moon rock" and "moon dust" into the country.
Yes the #Apollo11 crew also signed customs forms. We brought back moon rocks & moon dust samples. Moon disease TBD. pic.twitter.com/r9Sn57DeoW
— Buzz Aldrin (@TheRealBuzz) August 2, 2015
The flight number on the form dated July 24, 1969 is listed as "Apollo 11" and the flight routing is comically shown as Cape Kennedy to Honolulu via "Moon."
Most ominously, in the section marked "Any other condition on board which may lead to the spread of disease," the response was "To be determined."
Earlier, Aldrin also shared his travel voucher from Apollo 11. In case you're wondering how much Buzz claimed in travel expenses for a trip to the moon -- he was reimbursed exactly $33.31 for his share of the trip, which looks to be for transportation to Cape Kennedy.
#TBT My mission director @Buzzs_xtina's favorite piece of my memorabilia. My travel voucher to the moon. #Apollo11 pic.twitter.com/c89UyOfvgY
— Buzz Aldrin (@TheRealBuzz) July 30, 2015
Too bad he wasn't able to claim the mileage for that trip.
If Aldrin does come across any Apollo 11 receipts, he might want to consider auctioning them off. Judging by the over $9,000 that his 1966 space selfie from the Gemini 12 mission fetched recently -- which was about ten times more than expected -- there's likely someone out there willing to put a price tag on any bit of moon minutiae.