Sunday, April 26, 2015
When is a Star Party Not a Star Party?
The answer is “never.” As I’ve said before, muchachos, I can usually have a good
time at a star party even if I don’t see a darned thing. However, there's no denying I, like you, head for the boonies mostly for one thing: the sky. I can enjoy myself at an event hanging out with old friends and talking astronomy under clouds. But that is a lot easier if there's at least the possibility I will get to do some observing.
Take away even a chance of clear, dark skies, however, and, in these latter days, my attitude becomes, as I have also said before, "I can watch it rain in comfort at home." Still, the wise and successful astronomer is never too quick to throw in the towel.
Or so I tried to tell
myself last Wednesday, the day before the start of the 2015 Deep South
Regional Star Gaze Spring Scrimmage, the springtime edition of my fave local
event. 2013 was my first Scrimmage.
Previously, my engineering job kept me away from the smaller, springtime DSRSG, but that changed with my retirement in 2013.
I had such a wonderful time in ‘13, despite getting only one and a half clear nights, that I
did it again in 2014 and was looking forward to 2015. Unfortunately, as the
date for this year’s Scrimmage, April 16th, approached, I began to
think the event was cursed.
That began with my visit to the mailbox one afternoon a few
weeks ago. I was hoping to find the latest issue of Sky & Telescope or QST, or at least a care package from MyComicShop, but what turned up amidst the usual
ration of junk mail was a little white envelope. Rut-roh. I was pretty sure what it was without even looking at it: Jury Summons.
I was expecting that. The last time I was called was in
1985, just after I moved to Mississippi (temporarily) when I began my
engineering career with the Navy. All it took then was a call to the court to
tell ‘em I was no longer an Alabama resident and that was that. After moving
back to Mobile, I thought I’d be called, but I never heard another peep out of
the judicial system.
I was expecting a Jury Summons now, both because it had been
so long since I’d got one, and because things had changed with me. My situation
had been remarkably stable since 1994. Same address. Same phone number. Same polling place, etc., etc., etc. Then we moved out to the suburbs last spring, and
everything changed—address, driver’s license, voting place. I had the suspicion
one of those things would flip a switch somewhere sending a summons my way.
Mobile's courthouse, a.k.a. "R2D2." |
Not that I have a problem doing jury duty, mind you. I believe
serving on a jury is a civic duty at least as important as voting, which I try
to do every single election. Maybe jury duty is even more important. But why, for God’s sake, did it have to be for the week of the Scrimmage? I had to report on
Monday the 13th, and while the star party wouldn’t begin till
Thursday (it’s two days shorter than the autumn edition), that didn't give me
much time to serve on a jury trying a case. I did ring the number on the
summons to see if I could possibly reschedule, but the person on the other end
gave a big “uh-uh.” I’d have to report on the appointed Monday and talk about
rescheduling with the presiding judge.
Monday morning 13 April, I headed downtown, parking in the Civic Center lot and walking to the big Civic Plaza building. In the lobby, I got my first indication there’d be a lot of hurry up and wait involved in the proceedings. The summons was for 7:45, but what that actually meant was that you’d mill around in the lobby, which had no place to sit or any other amenities, not even restrooms, until the metal detectors guarding the elevators that would take you to the assembly room on the 8th floor began operation at 7:45.
Monday morning 13 April, I headed downtown, parking in the Civic Center lot and walking to the big Civic Plaza building. In the lobby, I got my first indication there’d be a lot of hurry up and wait involved in the proceedings. The summons was for 7:45, but what that actually meant was that you’d mill around in the lobby, which had no place to sit or any other amenities, not even restrooms, until the metal detectors guarding the elevators that would take you to the assembly room on the 8th floor began operation at 7:45.
Up there, I sat myself down in the big room, on one of the
most uncomfortable folding chairs it’s ever been my misfortune to encounter and
pulled out the science fiction book I’d been smart enough to bring along, a fat one, David
Feintuch's Midshipman’s Hope
(recommended if you like military science fiction). Quite a bit of time passed before anything happened. Finally, the
Judge came in, a nice chap, and we got underway.
First order of business was the Judge hearing the whining of
the people who wanted to be excused or at least rescheduled. A long line formed
immediately, but I was not in it. His Honor made clear that if you were excused you
would be called again. Soon. I had a
busy summer coming, so I decided it would be best to just get it over with.
While I believe serving on a jury is a civic duty, it
wouldn't hurt my feelings not to get selected for an actual jury. Especially for Grand Jury duty, which would
consume two full weeks. I dodged that bullet and was put on Panel Seven of the fourteen Panels of the
Petit Jury pool. I figured it could go either way. I might get selected,
but if there weren't many cases at the moment, it was likely I would skate. At 11 a.m.,
we were dismissed for the day.
Next morning things were much the same except I didn't have
to be in the assembly room (a different one, one lacking snack and drink
machines nearby) till nine. There, absolutely nothing happened in our area,
which was reserved for Panels 6 and higher. At 11 a.m. we were once again set
free. Back at the New Manse, I discussed plans with Dorothy. I decided if
I was let go on Thursday by 11, I’d head for the star party. If things went
into Friday or even late Thursday, I’d declare the 2015 Scrimmage a scrub. Frankly, given the weather, it didn't look
like it would much matter anyhow.
The weather was the big problem. There’s always a chance
of a rain-out for a spring event down here--and more, much more, of a chance in recent years than there used to be--but until the previous week it had been looking as good as it ever does for observing in April. I didn't
think we’d get three full nights, no, but was convinced we’d get two. The rain that
had been deviling us would begin to move out Thursday, the weatherman said, and I thought Friday
would be assured. That’s what I thought,
until the front came to a screeching halt. The clouds just sat overhead and
dumped rain on us day after day with barely a pause.
Wednesday morning found me back in my assigned place, Panel Seven,
Chair One. I had just about finished Midshipman’s
Hope when the young woman in charge of us suddenly announced, “I have your checks and
certificates; when I call your name, come up and get them and you can go.” I
should have been pleased, I guess, but frankly it all seemed a little
anti-climactic. And the rain was falling harder than ever.
On the way home, I stopped at Walmart. Despite the weather,
I'd decided I would indeed make the three-hour journey to the Feliciana
Retreat Center as planned. I’d already paid, and, as is normal and necessary
for star parties, there could be no refunds. I’d hang out with old friends, eat
the Center’s good food, grouse about the weatherman, hope the front would finally get a move on, and watch movies. So, I thought I’d better pick up one more DVD for Thursday night, which I had no doubt would be utterly clouded out. I kinda like sitting up late on
a rainy night in my room watching a movie on my laptop.
I was in luck. Wally-World had just the flick I was
looking for, the new animated Batman vs.
Robin. They even had the deluxe edition that included a Blu Ray disk, a regular
DVD, the digital edition, AND a nice figure of the Batman hisself. I thought
I’d take The Dark Knight to the star party with me as my mascot. Maybe he’d be
good luck and would bring us a dark (and clear) night. Back home, I added the disk to my stack, which
included Season Two of Star Wars: Clone
Wars and a recent acquisition, the 1990s Flash TV series. Time to start
packing the 4Runner, then.
I’d marshaled the gear in the Sunroom on Monday, so there
wasn't much work to do, really. Oh, there was one thing: swapping out telescopes.
Given the conditions, I dropped back from the C11 and CGEM to my Advanced VX and Edge
800. Might as well travel a little lighter, and if by some strange circumstance
we got some time under the stars, I knew the Edge, Mrs. Peel, would do a heck
of a job. I left the Mallincam in the queue but added my eyepiece box to it. I believed if we got anything, it would be through sucker
holes, and visual would best for that.
Before loading up, I went through the pile of astro-stuff eliminating
a few other items I thought would be unnecessary. It was unlikely I’d spend
much time of the field, for example, so the ice chest I normally keep under the
EZ Up wouldn't be required. In half an hour, the Toyota, Miss Van Pelt,
was packed, a record of late. Me? I felt pretty good.
I’d have felt even better if I thought I might actually get to see something with the C8, but
all-in-all I was far happier about the expedition than I had been about February’s somewhat misbegotten Chiefland trip.
Wednesday evening was spent watching disk one of Clone Wars.
I hadn't seen the episodes since they were first broadcast and was just blown
away by how good this animated series was. If the new Star Wars animated
series, Star Wars Rebels, which has
just finished its first season, can maintain its similar level of quality, it
is going to be another great ride, but it’s difficult to believe it can hit the
heights attained by Clone Wars. I made it a reasonably early night, but not too
early. What I was hearing via email was that nobody would be on-site till about
1 pm. I thought a departure time of 9:30 a.m. would be good.
Miss Van Pelt packed--if not with as much stuff as usual. |
So, Thursday morning, but not early Thursday morning, I
headed west and into the wilds of northern Louisiana, just over the Mississippi
state line, to the Feliciana Retreat Center, which is located near the small
towns of Clinton and Norwood, Louisiana. How dark is that part of the state?
Quite dark. At least as dark as Chiefland, Florida. As it should be. There
isn't much there. Including motels, convenience stores, and restaurants. When
you do Deep South, you are pretty much limited to what is at the Feliciana
Retreat Center. But that is usually A-OK.
The trip over I-10, I-12, and I-55 was utterly uneventful. I
made a couple of rest stops (too much coffee; I’d been able to hang out at home
later than usual and sucked plenty down). Amazingly–and depressingly—while it
was completely overcast the whole way, I didn't run into heavy rain till I got
off I-55 and neared the Center. Then
it began to rain. A lot.
Rolling onto the grounds of the FRC, I passed the observing
field by without even slowing down. There was simply no reason to. One hopeful
soul had parked his popup camper on the east side but hadn't set it up. I continued
on to the Lodge.
Other than the expansive observing field, the Lodge is what
makes the Feliciana Retreat Center such a gem. It’s like a miniature motel with
a beautiful dining hall overlooking a lake and plenty of small but reasonably nice
(recently somewhat remodeled) motel rooms. There’s heat and air conditioning throughout,
and even Wi-Fi Internet sometimes.
I grabbed my suitcase and umbrella, dashed inside getting half wet in the process, and found my old friends Barry (Deep South’s Managing
Director), Ron, and Frank kibitzing in the west corridor. They were of the same mind I was: if we saw anything
on any of the nights it would a
miracle. Likely all we’d observe would be the undersides of clouds, but, like me,
everybody was in a good mood and determined to have a good time.
The Lodge's nice dining hall. |
I dropped off my suitcase and laptop in my assigned room,
West Nine, and returned to the Toyota for a small camp table I sometimes set up
under the EZ Up canopy. Like last fall,
there was no desk and chair in my room, just a TV tray-table with a lamp on it.
I was prepared for that with the camp table for the PC and speakers. A visit to
one of the unoccupied rooms on the West side turned up a chair, too.
I got the Toshiba laptop set up and gave the Internet a
try. Nope. There was a little bit of a signal, but not enough to connect. I
moved the laptop to the dining hall, however, and found a strong and reasonably
fast Internet connection. I’d do my web surfing and Facebooking in the dining
area and my movie watching back in the room.
It was a couple of hours before supper, which, I’d been
informed by one of the center’s nice staff members (bunch of new faces this
time), was fish, catfish, which sounded OK. Till then? How about a little
reading? I had a couple of books with me, but thought I’d go lighter with the BBC's somewhat zany but always interesting Doctor
Who Magazine, which I’d bought at Books-a-Million as part of my star party
preparations.
That allowed me to spend a pleasant hour before it was time
to eat. The food was back to its usual impressive level after being on the not-so-hot side
last fall. The fried catfish really was good and the portions large. I confined
myself to a couple of fillets and a salad from the salad bar, but there was
potato salad and other sides for those who wanted such things. With only 8 of
us present, there was plenty of fish left over, and the staff boxed it up and
put it in the refrigerator for midnight snacking in case somebody got hungry
after a long observing run (yeah, right).
After the meal, I finished my magazine while occasionally
poking my head out the front door to see what Ma Nature was up to. I was pelted
by raindrops every time. The lower the Sun got, the harder the rain fell,
darnit. Still, this is Rod we are
talking about, and, as you know, his hopes always spring eternal. I am a glass
half full kinda guy, even if I sometimes have to make myself see the glass that way by force of will.
My travelling companion. |
I decided I’d grab my umbrella and take a walk out to the
field. I wanted to ascertain whether it would be practical
to set up gear in the unlikely event we had some clearing, or whether the field was under inches of water. My
reconnaissance revealed that if the rain did somehow, some way stop, we’d be
good to go. The field wasn't that wet; the water was draining off down the gentle
slope to the west. The grass, which was reasonably short, had obviously been cut not long ago and wouldn't be a problem. The only problem was those clouds.
Reluctant to go back to the Lodge where the handwriting
would probably be on the wall as far as weather reports, I hiked down to the
Center’s auditorium building, Barton Hall. Nice and well maintained as always,
though the wooden sides were turning green with mold in the unrelenting damp
weather. I felt a little sad standing there in the building. We use Barton for
dealers as well as presentations in the fall, and the last dealer we had onsite
was the late Jeff Goldstein of Astro-Gizmos.
The good news? I understand from Barry that the family
intends to carry on his business. That will make a lot of people happy. It was
always great to be able to buy the little but necessary items from ‘Gizmos when
you were at one of the many events Jeff attended—batteries, flashlights, red
filters for computers. I am much more likely to buy that sort of thing at a
star party than a freaking Ethos eyepiece.
At the Lodge, I hung with my homies for a while, but, come sundown,
it was movietime. The gang assembled
in front of the center’s big screen TV to watch Catch 22. I thought that might be a bit much for me given my current mindset,
however, and repaired to my room to continue the adventures of Obi Wan, Anakin,
and Ahsoka, which I carried on with until somewhat after eleven, when my
eyelids became heavy. One last check of
the sky (worse than ever) and it was nighty-night.
Friday dawned, not unexpectedly, to more clouds and more
rain. I was up early, very early, since I’d certainly not pulled the all-nighter
I’d hoped and planned to pull Thursday night. In the dining hall with my laptop,
I spent the hours before breakfast getting caught up on the doings on Facebook,
such as they were, and seeing who was complaining about what on the Cloudy
Nights Astro BBS. Breakfast was eggs and bacon, and was, again, up to the FRC’s
old standards.
After the meal, I spent a while chatting about scopes with
Barry, Ron, Gabe, Frank and the rest of the gang. Naturally, after “scopes” our
musings turned to “weather.” There really wasn't much to say about it, though. While some
periods of no rain and fewer clouds were forecast for the daytime Friday, it
was obvious the sky would close down completely again during the night. Which
got me to thinking…
Barry indicated he was considering pulling up stakes at four,
right after supper. I allowed that I might do the same thing. A little more thought and I announced I’d
probably leave at noon. What? I was gonna leave and miss the prize drawing, for a 5-inch Explore
Scientific achromat? “Yes,” I said. We’d won the scope’s 4-inch sister at the 2013 Deep South (the fall edition), and I really
didn't need the five. I’d probably pass on the scope if I won. Which led to
another interesting gear conversation centering on achromats, their focal
ratios, and the dreaded color purple.
Since it was not raining at the moment, I walked out to the
field and moped around a bit. My formerly sunny mood had evaporated. It would
have been different if there’d been a Sun in the sky, but there
wasn't one. I began wondering why I should wait till noon. There wasn't another
meal until four, so there wasn't much reason to hang out until twelve. If I left as soon as I packed the room,
I’d be home in early afternoon. Wait till four to take my departure and I'd be navigating through bad weather as darkness began to fall.
At the Lodge, I went to my room, packed my suitcase and
computer, and tossed ‘em in the 4Runner. Made one last check to make sure I’d
got everything, hung my key on the board in the lobby, and announced to my
fellow wannabe star partiers, “Gentlemen, adieu.”
Leaving turned out to have been a wise decision. The rains soon
came again, torrential ones, and it was good that I was able to negotiate the
waterlogged Interstates in full daylight. I didn't hurry, but still made it
home by 12:30. I didn't just sit and watch the rain fall at home when I got
there, either. Dorothy and I instead did that at Buffalo Wild Wings, where I
enjoyed some HOT wings (Wild sauce) and a couple of draft Michelob Ultras.
Was I glad I went to the 2015 Deep South Regional Star Gaze
Spring Scrimmage? Actually, I was. It was good to get out of the house. The
drive was kinda fun. And seeing my old mates was nice. Would I do it over again
even if I knew I wouldn't get in a lick of observing? Maybe. Probably, even. I also think I left at just the right time, while my (short) star
party was still fun. You know what they say, muchachos: “Fun is Fun, but Done is Done.”
2020 Update
I didn't realize it at the time, but this year marked the beginning of the decline of the Feliciana Retreat Center that culminated in the star party leaving the facility for greener pastures three years later. I couldn't really put my finger on what was different in the spring of 2015, but there was just a feeling of "entropy." All told? It wasn't in any way a memorable trip; I probably wouldn't find it notable but for that Jury Summons.
Comments:
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I love reading your blog entries and look forward to it every Sunday. You make even the mundane exciting ;) I too have been to too many starparties hoping for good observing only to see the underbelly of angry clouds. Oh well guess that the nature of our hobby! Also love it that you are a big comic book and sci fi fan....some my mates would give me quizzical looks at my penchant for comic conventions and my collection of figurines...you are a man after my own heart. And Clone Wars is awesome isn't it. Can't wait for the new movie in December The Force Awakens. The old gang is back.....
Forgot to mention that I swapped my 10" dob for a C8 after reading your book on SCT's. I love how easy I can now move my BIG scope (have the OTA mounted on an Orion VersaGo III). One of the reasons was also moving from a townhouse in Australia to an apartment on the second floor in LA with a shared carport. I am still amazed at how close the C8 is to the 10" in terms of light throughput (had them both side by side for comparison on DSO's) that I don't really miss my 10" anymore!
I also swear by your Urban Astronomers Guide and recommended to two other friends!
I also swear by your Urban Astronomers Guide and recommended to two other friends!
Hey Rod, just came across your blog when I saw you were reading Midshipman's Hope. I'm spreading the word that my production company is currently working on the film adaptation of that very book. Just wanted to let you know! There's plenty of Seafort fans floating around, but I doubt anyone thought it might get a movie.
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