. >> say again, jimboy 5? >> stage 2. >> the air was fair at cape kennedy. lacy clouds and a warm august 5. gemini v took off for space when there was no weather at all. the only problem, a leaky fuel cell threatened to cut their short flight at the star. it didn't. but out in the atlantic something else was brewing, a rising breath of wind soon to be known as betsy. dawn. august 27. at florida and island bases, navy, weather bureau, and air force planes are warming up to their daily task. 180 miles overhead, gemini v is whirling around the world, its sixth day of orbit. the astronauts are still alone in space but not quite alone. from the first day on, they've been sharing the sky with pyros weather satellites, circling endlessly, checking their pi clicking their pictures back to earth. and mid morning on the 27th, both tyros 10 and the navy weather plane make a discovery. >> tropical depression at 13 degrees north latitude -- >> the astronauts see it next. same day. >> okay. do you have any sort of a report over that tropical depression? >> we passed right