"Ginormous fondue pot, bubbling over with piping hot awesomesauce," said American astronaut Jack Fischer as he embarked on his first-ever spacewalk outside the International Space Station today.
The comments by Fischer, 43, were carried live on NASA television as he and his colleague Peggy Whitson, 57, made the 200th spacewalk to build and maintain the orbiting outpost.
The spacewalk was briefly delayed after NASA discovered a "small leak of water" in equipment that helps power their spacesuits.
The glitch affected equipment known as the servicing and cooling umbilical (SCU), which supplies power and oxygen to the spacesuits, discovered as the astronauts were seated in the airlock inside the space station.
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But the spacewalk was allowed to go ahead because according to NASA procedures, the astronauts can share one functioning SCU.
Spacewalks usually last about six-and-a-half hours, but today's was "abbreviated" due to the late start and lasted four hours and 13 minutes, Navias said.
The pair completed all the major work scheduled for the day, with the exception of a couple of minor tasks, he said.
It weighs 200 pounds (91 kilograms) on Earth and routes data and commands to experiments inside the space station, Navias said.
"It has been exhibiting some thermal issues of late, so it is being replaced," he said.
Fischer's enthusiasm for the beauty of the Earth beneath him was apparent throughout the spacewalk.
"Ooh, it's the Bahamas!" he fawned at one point.
"Oh, they are my favorite. Wow, they're so blue," added the rookie spacewalker, who goes by the nickname "2Fish."
Whitson, who was making the ninth spacewalk of her career, could often be heard chuckling at Fischer's exclamations.
As the spacewalk concluded, Whitson said it was "amazing" to have completed the station's 200th spacewalk.
"It is a huge honor to work with all of you."
The first piece of the International Space Station -- a Russian module -- was launched in 1998, and the first spacewalk ever conducted at the station took place in December that year.
Today, the $100 billion orbiting lab is roughly the size of a football field and a symbol of global cooperation among the 15 nations that have helped build and operate it.
NASA has experienced a series of problems with water leaking inside the astronauts' helmets, most notably in 2013, when water began filling Italian Luca Parmitano's headpiece, forcing him to cut short his spacewalk and make an emergency re-entry into the space lab.
NASA's bulky white spacesuits are aging, and the same models have been in use for four decades.
Despite the glitch that delayed the start of today's spacewalk, Navias said the suits performed "flawlessly" during the outing.
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