There is no need to plan vacations around your hobby or spend large sums on big telescopes, to simply look up and appreciate the stars.
Feel free to let the writer know for a future column. What special memories do they bring?
1. Seeing the May 1994 solar eclipse. The sun was about 97 percent covered as seen from Wayne County, Pa. Sunlight was dimmed like a view through sunglasses.
3. “Stumbling” across a very thin needle-like galaxy in my telescope. It turned out to be galaxy NGC 4565, a spiral galaxy viewed from its edge.
5. Gazing at the moon one night in the telescope, a flock of geese passed in front in black silhouette.
7. Witnessing a “meteor storm” when the Leonid meteors in November 1998 put on a very rare display, with hundreds falling in an hour’s time. Some lit the ground.
9. Finding Pluto in my telescope, appearing as an incredibly dim star.
The list can go on and on. A star-filled night never has been boring, and seeing the same stars again and again, always evoke wonder and inspiration. Seeing the Pleiades cluster or Orion, or any other familiar star group return to your sky each year, is like welcoming back old friends. Enjoy it.
Notes are welcome at news@neagle.com.
There is no need to plan vacations around your hobby or spend large sums on big telescopes, to simply look up and appreciate the stars.
Feel free to let the writer know for a future column. What special memories do they bring?
1. Seeing the May 1994 solar eclipse. The sun was about 97 percent covered as seen from Wayne County, Pa. Sunlight was dimmed like a view through sunglasses.
3. “Stumbling” across a very thin needle-like galaxy in my telescope. It turned out to be galaxy NGC 4565, a spiral galaxy viewed from its edge.
5. Gazing at the moon one night in the telescope, a flock of geese passed in front in black silhouette.
7. Witnessing a “meteor storm” when the Leonid meteors in November 1998 put on a very rare display, with hundreds falling in an hour’s time. Some lit the ground.
9. Finding Pluto in my telescope, appearing as an incredibly dim star.
The list can go on and on. A star-filled night never has been boring, and seeing the same stars again and again, always evoke wonder and inspiration. Seeing the Pleiades cluster or Orion, or any other familiar star group return to your sky each year, is like welcoming back old friends. Enjoy it.
Notes are welcome at news@neagle.com.