180 days. Orbit 3232. In the morning I observed the Far East. Today the ground is clearly visible. No cloud cover, no haze. I spotted a fault line in the Shimanovsk area and measured its angular position relative to the horizon. When I calculated the coordinates and plotted it on the map, it turned out I’d already marked it before. That’s interesting — I found this structure twice. After the first report, geologists checked this area and confirmed the presence of polymetals there. I observed Ukraine. Near Lviv, I noted a fault line nicely highlighted by isolated ridges.
When you approach England and Ireland, the water in the Atlantic is dark blue, with turquoise fields of plankton, but right now the water here is solid light blue. I can’t understand what that depends on. There must be a connection with the time of year. We started the Tavriya experiment with new columns. Then I worked on Oasis. Installed two new vegetation vessels with wheat and oat seeds. Repaired Niva. It seems like something’s working. There’s already sound, but the picture is still poor. Climbed into the cargo ship and found more packets of strawberries and cottage cheese with strawberries. An unexpected treat is doubly pleasant. Yesterday evening my heart ached a bit; today it’s easier. It’s the autonomic nervous system. Ran on the treadmill, feeling good. I’m looking at the flight program right now. It’s interesting how we live here — not by the annual calendar with the normal sequence of weekdays, but by our own calendar here. Days are distributed by experiments — astrophysical, medical, technological, repair-and-maintenance work, applied research, and rest. Ask us, and we don’t even know what day of the week it is.