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View Full Version : A Very Good Year (Not)


Dave Mitsky
04-January-2006, 03:20 PM
It was by no means a good year weatherwise in south central Pennsylvania (the 2005 Martian apparition was particularly disappointing) but I was able nevertheless to manage a number of regional dark sky site trips and a bit of imaging with my Canon Digital Rebel DSLR from the ASH Naylor Observatory.

The highpoint of the year, astronomically speaking, was most definitely using a 30-inch Tectron under the seventh magnitude skies at New Mexico Skies to log hundreds of objects including some rather interesting ones that I hadn't seen before such as the Double Quasar, the Elephant Trunk Nebula, Hind's Variable Nebula (a really tough hombre), IC 5148 in Grus, and Pease 1 in M15. Day trips to the White Sands Missile Range Museum, the Apache Point Observatory, the National Solar Observatory at Sunspot, and the New Mexico Museum of Space History were thoroughly enjoyable too, as was observing with a Tele Vue 140, a 152mm Astro-Physics Starfire, and a 20-inch Obsession at Steve Pastor's home observatory.

The Black Forest Star Party was a second highlight. I also enjoyed attending the 2005 Stellafane convention (we actually had two clear nights for a change) and, although the weather was not very cooperative, the Green Bank Star Quest was a lot of fun as well. The 2005 NEAF was another good time event.

As far as new gear is concerned, the purchase of a Denkmeier Standard binoviewer (along with a second 30mm Celestron Ultima and a second 19mm Tele Vue Panoptic) and a Denkmeier Power X Switch star diagonal lightened my wallet considerably.

Dave Mitsky

redshifter
04-January-2006, 08:43 PM
Interesting topic (at least to a fellow observer). My year was a 'mixed bag'. Decent seeing on 2 of the 3 nights at the Table mtn. star party (central WA area), but smoke from forest fires affected the other night's seeing. I did have an opportunity to observe through an 18" obsession (I now see why they're among the best -- super smooth dobs and great mirrors) and a 29" scope as well as several other big dobs. I had 2 decent nights out of 5 at the Star Hill inn (northern NM), but seeing the sights of that area as well as the drive through Colorado and Utah made the trip a pleasant one overall.

I didn't get in as much oberving locally over the summer as I usually do, and the winters here are either cloudy/rainy, or very high humidity, the last oberving session for me was 2 months ago and lasted about 1/2 hour before the clouds moved in.

New gear: Universal astronomics unimount heavy duty deluxe and appropriate tripod for my 25X100 celestron binocs. 17mm Vixen lanthanum superwide (68 degree FOV) eyepeice for my 10" Orion XT dob. I really like this eyepiece, in my 10" it gives approx 70 power with 1 degre TFOV, a very nice eyepeice for DSO observing. It and my 42mm Vixen are my most used eyepeices. I'm contemplating a 26-28 mm wide field eyepeice to get a better max exit pupil, the exit pupil with my 42mm is much too large, though the 2+ degrees of view are very nice. I can get M8 and M20 in the same field!

randb
05-January-2006, 02:56 PM
wow...thats awesome guys!!! I didnt get a chance to do any obsrving since I got my scope...cuz of the weather, and my job!!! Perhaps I'll have a lot more free time, once college starts!!! :)

redshifter
05-January-2006, 08:45 PM
You realize of course that the purchase of any new astro gear will result in several weeks of bad weather? :)