Friday, December 24, 2021
Issue 578: A Possum Swamp Christmas Eve 2022 ...
All I can say is “Merry Christmas, muchachos.” I know I’ve been remiss about getting new blog issues to you over the last couple of years. That did improve some this year, though, and I will see to it that continues into the new year. I am planning a series, in fact, on the Losmandy GM811 mount, which, despite it having been out for several years now, many are still curious about. And, no, I haven't forgotten The New Herschel Project, my quest to observe the Herschel 400 from my modest backyard.
But that’s next year. How about this year? How about now?
Even in the sparse years, 2019 – 2020, for the little old blog from Possum
Swamp, I have always managed to get the Christmas Eve edition out. And so it
is this Christmas Eve in the strange and alien Year of our Lord 2021.
What exactly is going on at the New Manse here on the
borders of the Great Possum Swamp this Yuletide? As you can imagine, it is a quiet
Christmas Eve. Until the plague well and truly takes its last bow, no festive Christmas
Eves like those of yore drinking Margaritas and eating fajitas at El Giro’s
Mexican restaurant—though there is still an El Giro’s, which is barely two
miles from Unk’s suburban digs. That will wait for next year (I hope).
What’s it like on this numinous day? Well, it don’t feel
very Christmassy. Now, I don’t expect a white Christmas in the Swamp, but I do expect
something with more of a Christmas feel than this. A glance at the weather
station display in Unk’s radio shack shows it’s 73F outside and climbing.
Whatev’. Unk will not let the cursed weather gods spoil his Christmas Eve.
You know what? In some ways, I’ve always preferred Christmas
Eve to Christmas. There’s that wonderful sense of anticipation of wonders to
come that maintains even in these latter days. And one of those wonders is one
of your old Uncle’s astronomy traditions. To wit, my Christmas Eve viewing of
that greatest of all ornaments, M42, The Great Orion Nebula.
So, what was up with that this Xmas Eve? In the days leading
up to the glorious 24th, Unk had been purty derned sanguine, “Hell,
why not get the GM811 and C8 out into the back 40 and get started on the
articles about the mount?” But in addition to temps in the 70s and rising
humidity, the weather had brought clouds. Not in overwhelming
numbers at first, mind you, but they were flowing in from the southwest. So, the Losmandy,
C8, and laptop might be a bit much. But which scope wouldn’t be a bit much?
My beautiful little C90, "Stella." I’d been thinking I needed
to get her out of her case after the long, weary spell she’s spent in there.
And she’s about perfect for a humid, hazy night where the light pollution is amplified
and I only want to look at bright stuff anyhow. Under those conditions, her
90mm of aperture and f/11 focal length can surprise.
| Miss Stella's optics still look good all these long years down the line. |
Many have been the permutations of Celestron's little (Gregory) Maksutov
Cassegrain. In addition to the orange tube, there’ve been black-tube models,
chrome-plated ones, rubber armored scopes, and the current dirt-cheap (f/14) Synta
version. It’s been a spotting scope, it’s been on fork mounts, it’s been sold
with GEMs. And most have been good little telescopes. The optics, including
those of the current bargain-basement model, have always been good—though you
often hear the opposite about the original orange-tube models.
There is a reason for that, campers, and it has nothing to
do with the telescope’s actual optical quality, but with its focusing method.
You see, the earlier C90s don’t focus by moving the mirror forward and back
like SCTs or the current Chinese C90. They focus by moving the corrector and
secondary forward and back. You twist the front part of the OTA to focus, not
unlike a camera lens.
That works well, but you have to learn to exercise a light
touch, or you get terrible shakes. Especially since the temptation is usually to
under-mount this small but long focal-length scope. Those “bad optics” are usually
due to owners not being able to attain sharp focus due to the shakes. Mount the
girl on a sufficient mount and you will see how sharp C90s can be. My own orange
tube is dead sharp with excellent optics.
| Overkill? Not at Chaos Manor South it wasn't! |
The original telescope used the old Japanese Standard .965”
eyepieces. Since you won’t want to mess with those if you, like me, acquire one
of the original C90s, you have to rectify that one of two ways: With an adapter called an “LAR,” a Large Adapter
Ring, or with a hybrid .965” – 1.25” diagonal. I have an LAR and can even use
2-inch diagonals with the li’l C90, but most of the time there’s no reason to do that.
My (Scopestuff.com) hybrid diagonal is just fine.
So, I grabbed the C90 case out of the sunroom closet where
the astrostuff (sorry Rex) lives. And also, my SkyWatcher AZ-4 altazimuth mount,
which is perfect for the little gal. However, to mount my spotter-heritage C90,
which sports only a ¼-20 tripod block, on the AZ-4 I’d need a Vixen dovetail on the
scope. I have one from Orion that has an integral 1.25-inch bolt for easy mounting
to the OTA. But nowhere could it be found. I know I have it still—I saw it
not long ago—but where?
While, as my loyal readers know, I’ve divested myself of a lot of unused astrostuff over the last six years, I still have a lot. Including a heavy-duty William Optics Vixen dovetail with a captive 1/4 20tpi bolt. Way overkill for a C90, but it would work fine. Slapped that on the girl, mounted her on the AZ-4, and out to the backyard Stella went to wait for darkness and for Orion, who, according to Stellarium, would be high enough for a look by 8:00pm.
There was no denying that by 2pm the scent of skunk was in the
air. Clouds weren’t just flowing in; they were pouring in with the sky almost
totally overcast. I didn’t stress out. It wouldn’t be the first time I’d been
cheated out of my M42 on Christmas Eve. But the Clear Sky Charts was still predicting mostly clear. Anyhow, if there weren’t even sucker holes by
your old Uncle’s (increasingly early) bedtime, I’d just bring Miss Stella back inside,
the work of maybe 5-minutes, one of the prime attractions of the little
critter.
So, Unk settled in with a bottle of sarsaparilla to watch television with the cats and see what would happen. I peeped out at the sky every once in a while. By 6pm, it was looking a small amount better, and I actually got a look at Jupiter in a sucker hole. Naturally, the seeing was dreadful, but Stella had no trouble showing the equatorial banding on and four Galilean moons nicely spread out on each side of Jove. Then the clouds cam again, and back inside I went.
Finally, it was 20 hours local. It was time. Best look I have ever had at M42? No, of course not--the drifting gangs of clouds saw to that. But it was there. My little telescope was showing the wonder to me, just as my Palomar Junior had showed it to me many, many long Christmas Eves ago. The clouds came, and the clouds went and it was enough.
What more is to be said? Have a wonderful Christmas everybody. These are tough times, but steady as she goes. I'll be back here again, soon. I promise!
Nota Bene: Want some Christmas Eve Cheer in the old Chaos Manor South Tradition? This here is one of my favorites.
Nota Bene 2: I appreciate all your kind comments. Unfortunately, the university email system pretty much prevents me from replying to them. Feel free to email Unk direct, however.
Saturday, November 27, 2021
Issue 577: Unks’s Advanced VX Rides Again
Yeah, I know, no blog entries for September and October and we’ve barely squeaked in for November. I hate to disappoint my readers, but there just wasn’t no way, muchachos. The weather was nasty all through September and into October. On those infrequent occasions when the clouds parted, there was a big, fat Moon in the sky.
Your broken-down old Uncle had also been experiencing some health
issues that made him reluctant to hit the backyard. You know, this “getting old”
stuff is for the birds. Finally, just as clear weather came and Unk began to
feel more like his old self, a third shot of Moderna had him laid pretty low
for a couple of days.
Thankfully, all that is now past, and I am indeed close to being my old self again for good or ill. In fact, this past week I felt Good Enough to tackle my number
one astronomy priority, checking out my faithful Celestron Advanced VX GEM
mount. If you’re a faithful reader of the Little Old Blog from Possum Swamp,
you know my AVX took a bath some months ago. I’d left the mount outside under a
Telegizmos cover. Said cover was beginning to show some wear five years down
the line, but it had not had a huge amount of use, and I thought it would
be OK.
That’s what I get for thinking. I noted some
gathering clouds as I covered scope and mount following my backyard observing
run, but it didn’t look like seriously bad weather was on the way. Unk was soon
snoozing peacefully and was not fully awakened by the sound of heavy rain and
thunder. Oh, I came somewhat to my senses, but thought, “The scope will be fine
under that cover,” turned over, and went back to sleep. The next morning, I
found that dadgummed Telegizmos cover had leaked and mount and scope were truly
drenched.
What to do? I first addressed the C8, Emma Peel, my Edge 800
SCT who’d been riding on the mount. There was a little water in the tube. But
as you know, your ol’ Unk is nothing if not experienced in pulling SCT correctors.
In just a few, the scope was dry and snug again in her case. The mount? That
was a different story. It looked wet enough that I thought there was likely
some water intrusion. Removing the plastic cover of her electronics enclosure, I
did note some dampness. Rut-roh Raggy…it doesn’t take much to cause problems.
What I did was dry the boards off with gentle heat from my
heat gun, and leave the mount head open in the air-conditioned sunroom of the
New Manse. For several days. I then had another look. Didn’t notice any signs
of corrosion, soo…. I applied power and
the AVX appeared to function normally for an indoor “fake” alignment.
However, nothing would tell the tale like a long evening under the stars. And
there things rested for a wearyingly long time.
Finally, just the other day, the Clear Sky Charts and other weather
resources indicated I might get some clear—if cold—weather following a front
passage. Maybe one night. I was determined to take advantage of that, and despite
some high haze I got the mount into the good old backyard. In the interest of keeping things simple, I
left the StarSense camera and hand control in their box and just plugged in the good, old
NexStar+ HC. It had been so long since I’d done a non-StarSense alignment, I
wondered if I’d still remember how to do one.
Which telescope went on the mount? My SkyWatcher 120mm APO.
It had been way too long since I’d used this pretty telescope and was anxious
to point her—Hermione Granger is her name—at Jupiter before it was too late. It
was pretty clear seeing wouldn’t be too hot, not hardly, but I wanted a look at
Jupe anyhow.
OK, power on…the NexStar display came to life with only
a slight delay despite the cold weather (it was in the fricking 40s, y’all).
I was gratified to see the mount's real time clock was only off a few minutes despite
it having been months and months since I replaced the little internal battery
and not having used the AVX frequently. Not at all. Hokay, let’s get aligned.
By “aligned,” I mean the Autostar 2+4 alignment. I planned
on nothing more than some casual looking, and, so, my polar alignment consisted
of merely eyeballing Polaris through the mount’s hollow polar bore. One of the
great things about the Celestron NexStar goto system is that it is quite immune
to goto errors caused by polar alignment.
It turned out I did remember how to do an old-fashioned
alignment. Got it started and the HC
requested Vega, which was pretty far off center, but still in the finder. Centered
it up in the eyepiece, remembering—shazam! —to do final centering with the up
and right keys only. Altair next. That sparkler lined up, the NexStar+ axed if
I wanted to add calibration stars “Sure, why not?” The first, Fomalhaut, was
behind a tree, so I picked another. Calibration star three was near-centered in
the eyepiece of the main scope when the mount stopped, but I did one more anyway…well…just because I could.
The resulting alignment? It was a good one. For a while,
anyway. Anything I requested was in the center of a 12mm eyepiece. Heck our
first target, Jupiter was centered in a 7mm when the slew stopped. And
that’s the way it was until I decided to fetch my observing chair, and in the
course of placing it at the scope bumped the tripod, but good. Henceforth,
objects were toward the edge of the 12mm, but always in view. And…that’s just
the way it goes on an Uncle Rod observing run, as you surely know if you’ve
been reading here long.
Next up? If I couldn’t take a picture of the Great Globular,
maybe I could get a parting glimpse of him as he plunged into the west. By this
time, M13 was maybe 15-degrees above the horizon. Alas, when the slew stopped
and I inserted the 13mm Ethos I saw exactly nuttin-honey.
I wasn’t about to give up. I suspected the problem was the
focus difference between the 13 and 7mm eyepieces. I should have focused the 13mm
before I left Jupiter. Down here in the horizon muck, no bloated stars were
visible in the field to use for focusing. So, off I went to Vega to focus. There
I sharpened things up. Did I note the utter lack of false color displayed by
the SkyWatcher APO? Nope. After this long, I just take it for granted.
Vega was a pure, icy blue sapphire.
Back to M13. I spotted the cluster the moment the slew
stopped. Not bad, really. Dim, sure, but grainy and wanting to show a little
resolution. Would more magnification have helped resolve more stars? Perhaps,
but the cluster was dim as it was. Pouring on more aperture would have helped,
but I wasn’t about to lug out the 10-inch Dobsonian, Zelda. The SCT? My
observation is there’s not a huge difference in visual images presented by the
8-inch SCT and 5-inch APO, not enough to justify me changing OTAs, anyhow.
What next? How about M57? OK. Off to Lyra we went. The Ring
was just that, a perfect little donut displaying plenty of contrast. Since the
constellation was riding high, I thought we might essay the somewhat dim globular
cluster M56. It was actually pretty good, looking much like the horizon-bound M13.
My observation over the years has been it takes about 10-inches of aperture to
make this somewhat neglected glob look good. And 12-inches is better. My
long-gone old friend, my 12-inch Dobsonian Old Betsy, could make this seemingly
nondescript object into a freaking showpiece.
The next target, M76, the Little Dumbbell is thought by some
to be “difficult.” Not so. I once viewed this little sprite with my old 60mm
ETX from deep in the light polluted suburbs, at my old observing site at the
public schools’ Environmental Studies Center. The secret is an OIII filter. But
it has to be the right OIII filter. I walked into the sunroom and fished
a little box labeled "OIII" out of my accessory box. Onto the 12mm it went--with some difficulty. I was nonplussed that for some reason it didn’t want to thread onto the
eyepiece properly. With the filter finally in place, still no M76 did I see. What
the—?
My red flashlight revealed the problem. On the edge of the
filter-holder was inscribed “Lumicon.” When I bought this one in 1995, I
thought it was the bee’s knees. But either it has somehow degraded over the
years (possible, I guess), or I just know more about filters 25 plus years down
the road. At any rate, this old thing (one of the pink-hued Lumicons) doesn’t work
very well, and the filter threads on it were never quite right. In I went and
retrieved my Celestron (Baader) 1.25-inch OIII. Ahhh…there it was. Not
only was the mini-Dumbbell visible, it even showed off its twin-lobed shape.
After that? Hermione and I hopped around the sky, me occasionally
looking at SkySafari on the iPhone for inspiration. In no particular order…
M103. This oft-overlooked small (6’) but brilliant galactic cluster
was just beautiful.
M31 and company. M31 looked maybe a bit better than it
usually does from the suburbs. M32 was a brilliant little thing, naturally.
M110 was something of a surprise. It was easily visible despite sometimes being
a trial from compromised skies.
M27, the (big) Dumbbell was attractive, especially with
the OIII. Unfortunately, haze was developing in Cygnus area, and I had a hard
time seeing nearby M71, the loose little globular star cluster once thought not
to be a glob.
NGC 457, The E.T. Cluster. Does this little guy ever look
bad? Well I remember showing him off to Miss Dorothy from the urban backyard of
old Chaos Manor South. He looked good there, and he looked great here, a little
stick figure awash in a sea of stars.
M15, The Horse's Nose Globular. Haze was creeping into the Pegasus area now, so I didn't expect much from this little glob. Surprise! In addition to M15's preternaturally bright core, quite a few teeny-tiny stars were on display at the edges of this wonder.
And on we went. Me and Hermione wandering the late autumn stars, going wherever our fancy took us. You know I strongly endorse having a detailed observing list. Which I didn’t have on this night—I was just going to do a quick check of the mount on an object or two, I thought. I probably would have seen more if I’d made one up or had dragged out a laptop running Deep Sky Planner. But you know what? For once, just tramping aimlessly across the sky was kinda fun…kinda freeing, actually.
Alas, before long, old Unk had reached his infamous “I
have had enough” stage. Those of you who know me or who’ve been aboard
this blog for long know that happens once my feet get cold. When they do it is
time to throw the big switch and cover the scope. Which I did. Said cover being
a new one, which I hope proves to be better than the lastun.
As for the mount, the Advanced VX, I was satisfied all is
well with it. Not a single hiccup from power up to power down. Which is a very
good thing. I need a mount in this weight/payload class, and with anything that
comes from China—as the AVX and her cousins do—being nigh impossible to get
these days, I certainly wouldn’t want to go mount-shopping right now.
Alrighty then. See y’all next time. Which will surely be
by Christmas Eve for our traditional blog post. But I do hope “sooner.”
Saturday, August 28, 2021
Issue 576: In Memory Yet Green: The Herschel Project
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| Where it all began... |
I did get the Advanced VX mount out one evening long enough
to test a new astronomy program—which will be the subject of an upcoming Sky
& Telescope Test Report. But only long enough to do that. As you may recall,
my AVX took a bath, literally, recently due to a leaky scope cover. During the
brief period before a fresh batch of clouds blew in, the AVX seemed OK, but I am
not willing to give the mount a clean bill of health until I can spend a few
hours under the stars with it.
Anyhoo, like last time, I didn’t want to let a month go by
without a blog. So, here are my reminiscences on the vaunted Herschel Project.
Act I: The Dipping
of the Toe…
I was thinking about the ‘Project the other day. Maybe
because Son of the Lockdown has me at home again without a whole lot to do. “What in tarnation is
Unk talking about this am? Too much Yell Saturday night, maybe?”
What I’m talking about, Skeezix, is The Herschel Project,
the observing project of a lifetime, of my lifetime anyhow. Most of us
conceive big observing programs at some point in our astronomy careers, but
most of those fall by the wayside long before they are finished. Mine didn’t.
Maybe because it had such a clear goal and maybe because the equipment I was
using at the time was so well suited to accomplishing that goal. Maybe an even
larger reason was two books I’d read.
Anyhow, set the WABAC machine for an October Night in 2009. Your
Uncle was out on the observing field of the old Deep South Regional Star Gaze in
the days when it was held at the Feliciana Retreat Center in the backwoods of
Louisiana. What I was doing was wondering what the heck I was gonna
look at.
It had been a good night with my 12-inch Dobsonian, Old
Betsy. I’d seen more than a few deep sky wonders, some pedestrian, some not so
much. One in the latter category was the Crescent Nebula. That night it was a
spectacle, with the center of the crescent beginning to fill in with textured
haze in my 12mm Nagler 2. But suddenly, just after midnight, my observing list
was done. There weren’t enough objects on it to see me through two nights of a
star party much less three. I reckon I hadn’t been sanguine enough about what
Betsy could accomplish under dark skies on a superior evening.
After a look at M42, I essayed a few easy showpieces,
covered Bets, and headed back to my little motel room in the Retreat Center’s
Lodge where I ruminated on the What to Look At business. I spent some
time wondering what that might be to the accompaniment of a little Rebel Yell
and a DVD of 2001: A Space Odyssey.
By the time Moonwatcher had thrown his bone into the air, I thought maybe, just
maybe, I had a glimmer of an idea.
I was nervous as sunset Saturday came in; I’ll admit. I considered
the Herschel II a difficult, daunting, and even scary list. Maybe that
was because I hadn’t taken a really good look at the details of the list's targets. Most of its
dimmest DSOs are small and thus not much of a challenge for an 8-inch telescope
under good skies. So, I was a little skeered as I punched the first object
ID into Betsy’s Sky Commander digital setting circle computer.
The Results of what I was now calling “The Herschel II
Project”? Between sunset and 2 am on Saturday evening at Deep South, I
logged 26 Herschel IIs. And I wasn’t trying to move particularly fast. Maybe the H2 wasn’t as hard as I thought?
Act II: The Big
Enchilada with Julie, Julia, Bill, and Lina
That idea was bolstered by my object haul on my next dark sky
Herschel observing run. I realized if I were to finish in a year, I’d have to
get on the stick given our usual weather in the southland. That in mind, I
packed up my Toyota with a ton of astro-gear including my
Stellacam-equipped NexStar 11 GPS and headed south for the Chiefland Astronomy
Village despite the fact we were dealing with the lingering effects of (yes) Hurricane
Ida.
Out on the Billy Dodd Observing Field, I discovered the true
power of a C11 and a deep sky video camera. The old Stellacam, which had
a maximum exposure of 12-seconds, was purty humble, but man did it pull in
Herschel IIs. They fell to the C11 like autumn leaves before the
wild hurricane fly. The grand total after my second big expedition? Over 100 more objects: 159
down, 241 to go.
The former came to me thanks to the wonderful Miss Dorothy. One
day there was a rare book sale at the university where she was a Department
Chair. One of the volumes on sale was that big, fat Scientific Papers. She bought it for me, lugged it home,
and I was soon immersed in reading the words of The Man himself and learning
more about him and his sister and fellow observer, Caroline. That led to
me devouring biography after biography of the pair and becoming even more
interested in (or maybe obsessed with) both Herschel and his deep sky objects.
The latter was a book that brought its author
deserved if brief fame. It was the adaptation of Julie Powell’s The
Julie-Julia Project blog articles wherein she cooked all Julia Child’s
recipes from Mastering the Art of French Cooking. That’s just the
jumping off spot for a little tour de force of a book that showed
everybody what one of these new-fangled blogs could be when coupled to a big
project and written with humor and heart.
Unk was smart enough to put two and two together, a big
project and a blog, and thus was born “The Herschel Project,” aka “The Herschel
2500,” aka “The Whole Big Thing,” aka “The Big Enchilada.” I would observe
all the Herschels, not just the H2, all of them. Which, after
eliminating the non-existent and duplicate objects left me with 2500 targets,
some of which were considerably dimmer and more obscure than those in
the Herschel II. The details? As I wrote in the blog one Sunday morning:
The perceptive (or nitpicky) amongst y’all may have noticed something different from the last Herschel blog. The title is no longer “The Herschel II Project,” but just “The Herschel Project.” What does that mean? Well, I’ll tell ya: the more I’ve researched ol’ Willie and the more of his objects I’ve seen, the more I’m inclined to go past the Herschel I and the Herschel II and tackle The Whole Big Thing, the 2500 objects (give or take) that constitute the entire Herschel List, the whole schmeer, that is.That might seem like the project of [many] years, but with modern technology and with a little luck, I don’t believe it will be. Based on the slew, and I do mean slew, of Herschels I captured down in Chiefland this past weekend and which I’ll tell you about next week, the Big Project seems more and more doable. Not only did I do bunches of Herschel IIs, I did Big Bunches from the parent list, the Big Enchilada, finishing all the multitudinous galaxies in Aquarius and most of ‘em in Cetus. So, I am on the verge of committing myself to going for the gold.
And commit myself I did. I wasn’t about to be pinned
down regarding time limits, but I secretly hoped to be done in about two years,
by sometime late in 2012, maybe.
And so, it began. While I continued observing from the club site and star parties like Deep South, there’s no denying the heart of The Herschel Project was the Chiefland Astronomy Village. Out on that field it all just came together, seemingly like magic. Heck, even plenty of summer nights were dark and clear during the Project years. While I had been no stranger to CAV before the Project, I now began heading south almost every dark of the Moon (when the exigencies of being a working stiff allowed me to do so).
It wasn’t all rainbows and unicorns, of course. I missed my
self-imposed deadline for completing the Herschel II by 6-months, not wrapping
it up until April 2011. For months, I was down to a mere handful of HII spring galaxies
that always seemed too low or behind a cloud or a tree. I finally completed the
Herschel II Project down at Chiefland and heaved a sigh of relief. But not too
much relief. I still had an almost overwhelming number of Herschel Big
Enchilada Objects to go.
But that number soon wasn’t so daunting. Trip after trip Down
Chiefland Way, doing 100 or more objects every time, soon whittled the big
list down. So did getting into the blessed zone. I developed a
routine that served me well.
The night before a Big Enchilada Trip, I’d load up Miss Van
Pelt, the 4Runner, with plenty of gear and a telescope appropriate for the conditions
I’d face. That was usually the C11, but if things looked iffy I might drop
down to the C8. I’d invariably bring the Stellacam (or, as the project rolled
on, the color Mallincam Xtreme), since I soon learned video would be key to
allowing me to complete all those objects in just two years.
When we rolled into Chiefland, I’d check into the old
Holiday Inn Express. I found being able to get a some rest in comfort following a
long night on the field allowed me to be ready to face the stars with a will on
the next evening.
Thence, back to town for a stop at the Walmart.
Therein, I’d stock up on snacks for the observing field—being able to take a
break, drink some water, and half a bite to eat helped me pull some really long
runs. In those days, I wasn’t much of a health food fan, invariably choosing Jack
Link Sasquatch Big Sticks. Another big help on those late/early runs?
Monster Energy Drinks. After WallyWorld, it was supper, usually at the Taco
Bell next door to the motel.
Finally, it was time to hit the Herschels. My final and most
effective lineup of gear included, in addition to the telescope and Mallincam,
a little DVD player I used as a monitor, Orion’s digital DVR, and a Laptop
connected to the scope running Greg Crinklaw’s SkyTools 3 (the software
of the Herschel Project) and NexRemote.
My procedure was simple. Click on an object in ST3, send the
scope there with the program’s Real-Time module. Center it up in the field of
the camera if necessary using a Wireless Wingman gamepad. Record 30-seconds of
video and an audio commentary on the object. Repeat as often as the sky, available
objects, and your old uncle’s stamina held out. When I could no longer hold
out, back to the motel for a little Yell, some silly TV like Ghost Adventures
or UFO Hunters, and some sleep in an airconditioned/heated room.
Following this simple, rote routine allowed me to observe
with maximum efficiency. Still, I was surprised how efficient I was. I
completed the Big Enchilada, The Herschel 2500 Project, on a dark run in
Chiefland in July of 2012, months sooner than I dared hope when I got the crazy
idea to observe over two thousand faint deep sky wonders.
Act III: August
and Everything After (the Herschel Project).
It’s hard to let go. And at first, I didn’t. I just
kept observing Herschels. I told myself there were reasons for that. For one
thing, I had all along thought the Herschel Project might form the basis of a book.
I wanted better images of the Herschels than those I’d captured with the
Stellacam, so it only made sense to go back and re-image many of them with the Mallincam
Xtreme. I also thought I’d want some sketches of objects to show that while the
project was mostly done with video, I’d done a fair amount of visual
observing too. I spent a couple of memorable nights on the CAV field observing
the old fashioned way—with eye and telescope.
So it went for quite some time, beginning in 2013. That year
was notable since it was when I retired—in the spring. My first Herschel run
after that was a memorable one. I headed for the Feliciana Retreat Center, the
place the Herschel Project was born, and the Deep South Regional Star Gaze
Spring Scrimmage (the smaller spring event I’d always had to miss because of
work).
I had a new telescope with me, my retirement gift to myself,
a Celestron Edge 800 SCT (along with an Advanced VX mount to replace my old
CG5). What do I remember most about that expedition in addition to nearly being
the Lone Astronomer of Feliciana (see this)? How wonderful it was to get up Sunday
morning and realize I didn’t have to be in a hurry.
I could leave anytime I wanted and get home at any time I
wanted—no work on Monday morning. That home, by the way, would soon not be the
legendary Chaos Manor South. Lots changed following the end of the H-Project
including where Dorothy and I lived. We decided downsizing made sense and lit
out for the suburbs.
And so, it went for the next couple of years, with Unk grudgingly hanging onto the Herschels. Oh, I tried a couple of other observing projects, but none lit my fire like the Herschel Project had. I was beginning to believe lightning only strikes once.
How about the book? I began assembling it much the way Miss
Powell assembled her blog into one. But I only worked on it for a little while.
Many things were changing with me in addition to the above, and I found my
heart just wasn’t in it. Then, I had the second edition of Choosing and Using
a New CAT to get out. And a new deep
sky observing book to write…and The Herschel Project Book just kept receding
farther into the background—where it remains to this very day, nine years after
the last object was in the can.
Eventually, I stopped looking for another big “Herschel
Project.” If one comes to me, so be it. But, as above, I have decided The Big Enchilada really
was the observing experience of a lifetime. That's OK. Even if I didn’t
have all those old blog articles, and videos, and photographs, The Herschel Project would remain green in my memory where it shall remain to the end of
my days.
Sunday, July 25, 2021
Issue 575: My Favorite Star Parties, Deep South Regional Star Gaze 2000
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| M15, star of Unk's DSRSG 2000 (Edge 800 on Advanced VX mount)... |
And yet, I didn’t want to let another month elapse without a ‘blog entry. Now, last time, I said I was reluctant to take another trip to the
nostalgia well. I thought that sucka was dry. But then I recalled I’ve never said a word about the 20th Century's final edition of one
of my favorite star parties, the Deep South Regional Star Gaze.
Then as now, star parties can iffy things weather-wise no
matter the time of year. Especially in this part of the county, the Southeast.
But Miss D. and I had high hopes for 2000’s DSRSG, the 18th
edition of the nearby event. After two
years of so-so observing, and 1999’s complete and utter rain-out, surely the
weather gods would throw us a bone. Wouldn’t they?
And, indeed, it looked as if conditions might be—I was almost
afraid to think it and jinx it—fantastic for the long star party weekend. October
2000 began with unseasonably cool and dry weather. But, wouldn’t you know it? As
the date for DSRSG approached (October 25- 29), the cotton-pickin' weather pattern
returned to the more familiar clouds and humidity. The result being I
definitely broke a sweat on star party Thursday morning as I was loading up the
good, ol’ Toyota Camry.
What did I load? I was after photons, visual photons,
this time, not astrophotos. So, in the vehicle went my time-honored 12.5-inch
truss tube Dobsonian, Old Betsy. I brought along a second scope too, my little Celestron (Synta) Short
Tube 80 f/5 refractor ("Woodstock") on his EQ-1 mount. If the sky cooperated, I thought he might
give me some of the wide-field deep sky vistas I craved. “If.”
There were also all the things I took along during my go-go
days of star partying: EZ-up tent canopy, camp table, ice chest, eyepiece box,
etc., etc. What? No laptop. Nope. At this time Luddite Unk was still
using printed atlases, namely Sky Atlas 2000 and Herald-Bobroff.
Yeah, it was a hot and humid and not atypical Gulf Coast morning when
I set out for the site of the star party, which in them days was held at McComb, Mississippi’s Percy Quin State Park (in the sparsely
populated Pine Belt). “Wait a minute, Unk!
When you set out?! What about Miss Dorothy?” At this time, Dorothy was
at the height of her distinguished career at the university, and business there kept
her from motoring to the park with me for that first day of DSRSG. Instead, she
planned to drive up with my friend and observing companion, Pat Rochford, on
day two, Friday.
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| The old but well-remembered DSRSG field... |
By the time I finished, I hadn’t just broken a sweat; I was drenched,
but the sky was holding. My next stop, the cabins, was a prime attraction of
the Percy Quin site. Actually, “cabins,” a word conjuring drafty, decrepit boy
scout chickies, is not an apt description. These
cabins were modern, usually clean, comparatively comfortable, and featured
central air-conditioning and heating. Best of all, perhaps, they were within
easy walking distance of the observing field, a football field-sized expanse of
grass ringed by pine trees.
Soon, I was settled in our room—star party organizer Barry Simon always assigned me and Miss D. the “counselor’s room” in the Possum Swamp Astronomical Society’s cabin. Afterward, back to the field where I hung out for a while renewing old acquaintances and talking shop about what passed for the latest technological innovations in amateur astronomy nearly a quarter century ago. The big gossip? There were murmurings Celestron was going to release a new goto telescope, an 11-inch NexStar(!).
With sunset still an hour away, the Auburn Astronomical Society’s Russell Whigham and I joined Barry Simon and the rest of the Ponchartrain Astronomical Society contingent for the traditional Thursday evening meal at Mr. Whiskers' Catfish Cabin, home of all you can eat catfish, just outside the park gate. Was the catfish good? Oh, it was very good. Good enough to eclipse the fact it was awful slow in coming and they were purty stingy with the "all-you-can-eat" thing.After my repast ("pigout" is more like it), as evening came on, the sky just got better and better, really opening up with that velvety black appearance we crave. Using both the 12.5” Dobsonian, Betsy, and my faithful 80mm f/5 refractor, “Woodstock,” I toured the autumn deep sky until the wee hours. I visited many marvels, both old and new, but my favorites on this night were these:
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| Good catfish and lots of it... |
M27, the Dumbbell Nebula, is always a treat, and from
a dark site with a moderate aperture scope it becomes a revelation. I
alternated between using an OIII filter and looking at the nebula unfiltered.
With the filter, the true extent of M27's nebulosity was obvious, with the cloud
beginning to look more like a football than a dumbbell. Without the OIII, this planetary nebula’s central star was easily visible.
M31 and NGC 206. The Great Andromeda Nebula (Galaxy) can be disappointing, but on this evening it was awesome. In Betsy, a pair of dark lanes was easily visible defining the hard to see spiral arms as I scanned across the great disk. The galactic nucleus appeared as a tiny star-like point, and, most wonderful of all, perhaps, the great cloud of stars in one of the arms, NGC 206, was easy (this thing is tough if the sky ain't right). The two companion galaxies, M32 and M110 (NGC 205) were marvelous, with M110 looking as large as I’d ever seen it. I dare say the view was even better in the 80mm, since with Woodstock all these things were in a single eyepiece field.
But the prize beauty Thursday night? The Horse’s Nose (globular) Star Cluster, M15. This pretty glob, located not far from the bright star Enif, The Horse’s Nose, in Pegasus, was flat-out amazing. You’ve probably heard about M15’s curious, bright core (at one time it was thought to contain a black hole), but if you’ve never seen it from a good, dark site, you really have no idea how striking it is. In the 12-inch, the core simply blazed away, looking like a brightly glowing ember surrounded by countless sparks of light.
And so it went, object after object, until around 3am. I wasn’t ready to turn-in even at that hour, but there was no doubt
weariness was beginning to assail me in those primitive days before there were dadgum Monster
Energy Drinks. I’d awakened at 6 am that morning to pack, and the long day
and night were beginning to take their toll.
I pulled the big switch, tired but happy. I
covered the scopes with a tarp, though I probably didn’t need to. This had been
one of the few DSRSG evenings in memory when dew hadn’t been heavy. As the day
had worn on, the humid, sticky air had seemingly blown away, yielding an
amazingly comfortable and bug-free evening.
Friday was a busy day. I was scheduled to give a talk in the
meeting hall at 3pm about my forthcoming book, Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope.
I’m talking about the original, not Choosing and Using a New CAT (now in its second edition). Long time back it feels like, campers.
I sure wanted the presentation go smoothly, so I spent quite some
time getting my 35mm slides sorted out (no laptops and PowerPoint projectors
just yet). Shortly before noon, Pat Rochford and Dorothy arrived. Dorothy was
excited to finally be at “our” star party and was showing off a new red light
she’d bought for the trip.
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| Percy Quin Group Camp cabins... |
I was happy to have a large and responsive audience
for my presentation on the new book, and thought the presentation went well despite some fumbling. I was new to all this, but I would soon be doing star
party after star party as a speaker, would discover PowerPoint and laptops, and
would figure things out (to the extent old Unk ever figures anything out).
There was no doubt as twilight deepened that Friday night
was going to be another goodun. And it was, though conditions were not quite
as good as they had been Thursday. Why? That stinking humidity that had departed on
Thursday was back with a vengeance. The dew was heavier, and the light dome
from McComb was natcherly more evident, but the sky was still OK. Which deep
sky object struck my fancy on this evening? One I’d seen before, but did
not remember well, NGC 6905, the Blue Flash planetary nebula in
Delphinus.
This 12th magnitude nebula was large and well defined in 12-inch
Betsy, and, in addition to its amazing blue color, showed some
“blinking” like the nearby Blinking Planetary. That is, look straight at it and
the nebula would fade away, use averted vision and it would spring back into view.
NGC 7331 and nearby Stephan’s Quintet also looked good on
Friday. It didn’t take any imagination to pick out all the little galaxies in Stephan's with Miss Betsy. That galaxy cluster was one of my most-wanted objects back in
the days when I observed mostly with 6 and 8-inch telescopes from the suburbs.
I was just thrilled with the views Bets delivered of this legendary object.
Was I close to deep sky overdose when I shut down at 4am?
Not quite…the spirit was still willing. The body was weak, though. I called
it quits after a good, long tour of M42, the Great Orion Nebula. In the 12-inch,
the nebula seemed to tower above me in the 12mm Nagler eyepiece’s field. Cold,
starkly beautiful, and almost threatening in aspect. After that, I sat
in a lawn chair for a little while, watching the fading stars as dawn came in,
and toasted them with a little of the Rebel Yell, natch. Some things have changed over the long years,
and some ain’t.
Saturday was a long
day at DSRSG. Everybody was starting to feel like zombies thanks to two
beautiful nights, and, even in October, sunset seemed to take forever to
arrive. Luckily, Rex’s Astrostuff, an astronomy vendor who was a regular feature
of southern star parties all through the 1990s, was on site, so I amused
myself—how else?—by buying some of that “astro-stuff.”
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| Those old, low-tech Astro Cards could guide you to countless wonders... |
Saturday night started out great, with the heavens
again opening up as night descended. But it was not to be. The sky gods had no
doubt decided Deep South’s observers had had enough for one year.
By 9pm, heavy haze had moved in. It cleared somewhat just after midnight, but only
a little, and only for a little while.
It was just as well, I suppose, since the milky
sky encouraged me to shut down much earlier than I had on the other nights. There was that Sunday morning packing and the drive home to contend with, after all. Before
the haze moved in, though, Pat Rochford and I had a great time playing with
a little Meade ETX60 he’d brought with him—I was skeptical a cheap
(comparatively speakin') little scope like that could find anything, but it could. Man,
oh man, could it. It was one of the things that encouraged Unk to embrace laptops and goto telescopes not long thereafter.
2000 was a great DSRSG. Maybe one of the last truly outstanding years
at the location. The new century would bring changes, including several moves
for the event. It’s still in business, but now on its fourth home. Be that as
it may, the old Deep South Regional Star Gaze where I voyaged the deep, deep
sky with a simple Dobsonian, Herald-Bobroff, and a Telrad is yet green in memory and always shall be.
Friday, June 11, 2021
Issue 574: A Short One…
| Plenty of clouds down Chiefland way... |
I know it’s a cliché, but the dadgummed weather is just crazy-cloudy
these days. A decade of Unk’s impressions doesn’t amount to a hill of beans in
the world of climate science, I know, but my impression is things are worse
clear sky-wise. As I’ve said before, I noticed a change in my part of the
country, the deep south, beginning nearly a decade ago, around 2012.
In those days, I was still loading up the truck, Miss Van Pelt,
with a ton of astro-gear and heading south to the Chiefland Astronomy Village down in Florida at
the drop of a metaphorical hat. I maybe didn’t get down there every dark
of the Moon, but I got down there plenty, whether to pursue the Herschel
Project, or just to take a picture of M13 from a dark sky, or play around with some new gear.
I’d usually do three days, and you know what? Even at the
height of those southern summers I’d usually get two clear nights and sometimes
three. But, then, about, yeah, 2012, I noticed the summer weather seemed
different. I began to spend a couple of nights of a three-night run in the cotton-picking
Chiefland Days Inn instead of on the observing field. And then there began to
be complete skunkings. To the point where I grew reluctant to drive six freaking
hours to sit in a déclassé motel room.
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| A rainy night in...Florida. |
I’ll also admit I’m less hardcore than once I was. To be
honest, I have trouble convincing myself to brave the clouds and the bugs and the
haze and the heat to see a little something from suburban skies. I know
I’ve missed some cool views that way, but there it is. Forty lashes with a wet
noodle for Unk, and I promise to get out into the backyard more frequently henceforth. If it
ever clears up and Gulf storms stay away.
Rather than let another month go by blogless, I thought you,
my (overly) loyal and kind readers, might enjoy a little something…just
a few bullets, really, about what's been going on around here (I almost said “around
Chaos Manor South,” but those days are gone forever).
· I had the pleasure of reviewing Phyllis Lang’s latest edition of Deep Sky Planner (Version 8, if you can believe that). You can read all about it in my Test Report in the upcoming issue of Sky & Telescope, but I can tell you it’s a goodun.
· Don’t forget to check your scope covers before you use them. I had a Telegizmos cover I bought back around 2016. While it wasn’t their “365” model, it was a good one, well made I thought. Six years is six years, though, and it did get a fair amount of use in my backyard. It’s so nice to be able to leave a scope set up under a cover for a few days. Almost as good as an observatory (which I have no interest in building at this juncture in my life). I should have paid more attention to it, though. The cover was looking a little tattered…but so what? The “so what” is we got a right good rainstorm in the early hours one morning and the cover leaked. Badly.
There was some water intrusion into the tube of my SCT, Mrs. Emma Peel. That was not a huge problem to fix, however, since I’d become rather experienced in disassembling the Celestron (I’m still mad at them). However, what was even more drenched with water was my Advanced VX mount head. Rut-roh, Raggy.
· I love the AVX. It has never failed me for anything I’ve wanted to do with it. Heck, I’ve even gotten good guided astrophotos with it and the SCT at f/7. I’d hate to have to think about replacing it. I opened up the mount, dried it out, and let it sit in a low humidity environment disassembled for some days. Back together, I did a fake alignment indoors and the mount seemed fine. The only true test is under the stars, of course, and I have not been able to do that yet. Fingers and toes crossed.
· If I have to replace the mount, what would I replace it with? Maybe not an AVX. You never know the truth of what you read on the consarned Internet, but it seems like not everybody gets a VX as good as mine. I’d probably replace it with… I dunno… An HEQ-5? iOptron’s new lightweight mount, the GEM 28? Search me and hope I don’t have to find out.
· What else…what else? Some folks get the impression I’m now telescope poor. Yes, I did sell off a lotta stuff, the larger instruments (good thing I did given my current condition), and also some of the less used astro-junk. But I’ve still got…
66mm William Optics SD patriot refractor.
80mm WO fluorite APO.
80mm SkyWatcher f/11 achromat.
90mm Orange Tube Celestron C90.
100mm f/5.6 Explore Scientific achromat.
100mm Celestron f/10 achromat.
120mm SkyWatcher f/7 ED APO.
125mm ETX 125 (the storied Charity Hope Valentine).
150mm Zhumell f/8 achromat.
200mm Edge SCT, Mrs. Peel.
250mm Zhumell f/5 Dobsonian, Zelda, who is now my Big Gun.
And I still have a couple of boxes of eyepieces, three mounts (the AVX, a SkyWatcher AZ-4, and my Losmandy GM811G). So, don’t weep for me, AstroBloggers. That I got rid of so much and still have so much is a sign I let my astro-buying get a little out of hand for a “while.” I’m good now and feel good equipment wise.
· What gets used the most? That’s easy, the 80mm APO, the SCT, and the 120mm APO. That’s for “serious” astronomy. What do I mostly use for a quick look at something and to keep my proverbial hand in? The 80mm f/11 SkyWatcher on the AZ-4 alt-azimuth mount.
· Do I at least think about new stuff? Not much. I don’t need more eyepieces, I’ve clearly got all the scopes I can use, and the three mounts are more than good enough. Assuming the Advanced VX still works. If it doesn’t? I need something in a similar weight class. As above, in the event, I’m thinking about an HEQ-5. I wouldn’t mind going back to EQMOD for scope control. I’ve also, yes, considered the iOptron GEM 28. Its weight and payload are impressive sounding. But I hear a lot of not-so-good experiences with their mounts. But I’m, yeah, hoping not to have to go our and buy any mount anytime soon.
· Astronomy software? These days my needs are simple. What I mostly use is three programs, which tend to the simpler compared to what I ran during, say, the go-go days of the Herschel Project: Deep Sky Planner, Stellarium, and Nebulosity.
· There are many things to like about DSP. It is a mature and capable astronomy program. But sometimes it’s the little things. What has encouraged me to adopt it for my personal use? Nice large fonts. Having to squint at minute text on a dim red screen, even with your glasses on, ain’t no fun.
· Stellarium? I still love Cartes du Ciel and use it for some tasks. But Stellarium has come an awful long way in the last five years, and I don’t know what else I require. It’s just so pretty, too. That it now has built-in support for ASCOM makes the deal on this (free) software even sweeter.
· Nebulosity? It just works for acquiring images with my old Canon 400D and 60D (which are actually more sophisticated and capable than your silly old uncle needs for his astrophotography). It also has the best stacking routine in the bidness.
And…and…and… Can’t think of nuthin’ else campers. I hope to be back here again soon. Probably with the results of the AVX post deluge check ride. Till then, then...
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Issue 573: Charity Hope Valentine Rides Again!
That often sought after but also much-feared Ground Truth? I
am a FAR less active observer here in my late 60s (it feels awful strange
to say “late 60s”) than I was even five years ago. In part, that is due to the accident I had in
early 2019 that most of y’all know about. I talk about it more than I
should, perhaps, but that is because it now seems to have been the watershed
between “young” Uncle Rod and "old" Uncle Rod.
How has that affected my observing? Well, most noticeably it
left me not as able to deal with gear setup. And I don’t just mean heavy stuff.
This afternoon I made the mistake of picking up my ETX 125’s tripod with my
“bad” arm and it sure let me know that wasn’t what I should have done.
Thankfully, I began selling off my big/heavy astro-stuff—the C11, the
truss-tube Dobsonian, the Atlas mount, etc.—about five years ago. I had a strong
whiff of “change is in the air” even then.
Certainly, I still have telescopes and mounts. I have a C8,
a Celestron Advanced VX mount, some nice refractors ranging from 6-inches to
66mm in aperture, a Losmandy GM811G, and my 10-inch truss tube scope, Zelda.
And, when I’m feeling good, I can handle any of ‘em. When I’m not so
good but still want to look at something, my 80mm f/10 Celestron achromat,
Midge, on an AZ-4 alt-azimuth mount works—like she did for the Saturn – Jupiter conjunction.
But it ain’t just that I sometimes have a hard time physically dealing with telescopes and mounts. That is far from the whole story. Another result of the accident is a lingering fear of falling in the dark. For that reason (and the pandemic, of course), I haven’t been to a star party since January 2019. Heck, I haven’t even been out to the local dark site. I feel much more relaxed in the familiar backyard even if it means giving up magnitude 6 skies for mag 5 ones (at zenith on a good night).
I also feel the cold more acutely than I did. This had
actually begun some time before 2019, but seems to have accelerated since then.
The result is unless it is a mild night, I’m staying inside. Oh, I
can still do astrophotography on cold nights, since I can get the
scope/camera/mount going with the aid of PHD Guiding and Nebulosity
and duck back into the den while the exposure sequence runs. But that doesn’t
much feel like a night out with the telescope to Luddite Unk.
Even my astrophotography has ebbed. Not so much in the
number of targets I shoot, but in how I do it. ‘Twas not long ago I was eager
to embrace the latest hardware and software to hit the imaging game. Now? I
have more time to play with such things, but I just don’t seem to have as much
patience for the new and (for moi) complex—at least not when it’s dark
and I’m hooking things up by flashlight.
I know the big deals today are things like Sequence
Generator Pro, and small computers like Raspberry Pis mounted on the scope to
manage everything and shoot images to a phone or tablet. Not for Unk, I guess.
If I take pictures, it’s usually with my thirteen-year-old Canon 400D DSLR. And
I no longer participate in the Cloudy Nights mounts forum quest for ever tinier PE figures. Nor do I dream of more-better-gooder to the tune of ten
thousand-dollar telescope mounts. If my stars look round, and I think my
pictures look pretty, that is enough. More than enough.
| Still as pretty as the day I met her. |
And that’s the way it is at the beginning of a
new decade of this new century. Hey, y’all, I ain’t looking for sympathy. Don’t
need it. I was quite active in astronomy from the 80s and into the
mid-90s, and extremely active from the mid-90s to about 2015. There
weren’t too many things in the sky I didn’t see or image; too many outstanding
astronomers I didn’t meet; and too many star parties, museums and observatories
I didn’t visit. It was “What a ride, what a ride!” folks. I just wanted
y’all to know the reasons you don’t and won’t see the blog as frequently as you
once did (I would still like to do at least one new article a month).
Enough of that stuff. Let’s talk telescopes.
Not quite a year ago, I resolved to get my beloved 15-year-old ETX125 PE, Miss Charity Hope Valentine, out of
mothballs. I replaced her LNT battery, got her into the backyard and had a good
time. For a while. The next time I drug Charity out, she was acting a mite
peculiar. The Autostar display would come and go. Sometimes she wouldn’t
respond to commands. Once in a while the Autostar computer would reset.
Now, I was tempted to say “She’s just gettin’ old—like
you, Unk.” But I didn’t want to leave it at that. Charity still looks
beautiful—as pretty as the day I met her. I’m proud to say I’ve taken good care of her. Surely, I could do a little troubleshooting?
| A 16-year-old Autostar cable. |
Which I did—some eight months later. What was up with that?
Well, at the time I discovered Charity’s problem we were right at the start of the
2020 hurricane season, which was a doozy, and whose storms stretched on to
November. Then it got cold and I went “refractors on grab ‘n go mounts” all the
way (Charity is less of a hassle to carry and set up than a fork-mount 8-inch
SCT, but not by much).
Anyhoo, couple of days ago, I got off my butt and ordered a
replacement from one of my long-time go-to vendors, Agena Astro Products. After
it arrived, a test with Miss Valentine showed it and her worked just fine. What was
left to do other than set the girl up in the backyard on a cool but not bitter
spring night?
Now, originally the scope to be set up wasn’t going to be
Miss Valentine. I still have every intention of carrying on with the New
Herschel Project. However, one look at the afternoon sky showed that was
likely a non-starter. While still clear, there was obviously increasing
haze. The C8 would stay inside and the ETX would go outside because of the
degrading conditions—the situation that is her forte'.
When it finally got dark (blast this DST), out
back went your old Uncle. As you know if you’ve read my past installments
concerning her, Charity can be a neurotic sort. Some nights, gotos are bang-on
all over the sky. Others, she can’t find anything. Which would it be
tonight?
While I probably should have done drive training after a
year, almost, of the scope not being used, it was chilly, so I just set Miss in
PE home position—turned counterclockwise in azimuth till she reaches her hard
stop—and turned on the power. That is all you have to do with the ETX PE. The
scope reads the time that’s kept current with the battery in her LNT (“Level
North Technology”) module, finds tilt, level, and north with the aid of her sensors
and compass, and heads for the first of two alignment stars. Charity chose
Sirius and went that-a-way.
Charity has the most trouble with targets
anywhere near zenith. That is compounded by her long focal length and the fact
that since she is limited to 1.25-inch oculars, you ain’t gonna be using long
focal length ultra-wide 2-inch eyepieces to make finding easier. Nevertheless,
my girl put both M35 and M37, both of which were up pretty high, in the field
of that 25mm. How did they look? Not so hot. The haze was thickening and
really scattering the light pollution.
But, with Charity aligned, I thought we might as well visit some old
friends anyhow. Which? Oh, the usual heavenly masterpieces like the
above-mentioned open clusters, and, of course, M42. If you’re an “advanced
observer” you’d probably scoff at the targets Charity and me essayed (we spent
quite a bit of time on the near First Quarter Moon). I know. I once fit
that “advanced” appellation and was more interested in chasing quasars than
looking at the dumb old Moon. But that was then and this is now and Rod and
Charity had a fine time oohing and ahhing at marvels that never age even
as we do.
Note Bene:
Miss Dorothy and I have now received both doses of the vaccine and hope
the same is true for you.













