I make no secret of the fact I don’t do as many
star parties as I used to. Oh, I am still happy to fly in to the most distant events
to give talks to my fellow amateurs in my capacity as an astronomy
writer/raconteur, but when it comes to loading my Toyota 4Runner with a ton
of gear and driving long distances to dark skies to observe? Not so much
anymore.
There are various reasons for the above, including the fact
that I can now do deep sky astrophotography from my backyard. And who knows? My current aversion to driving
to Timbuktu, often to do nothing more than look at the undersides of clouds,
may be a temporary thing. Be that as it may, at this time I prefer to stick
close to home.
“Close to home” doesn’t just mean I decline to drive two or
more days to get to the Texas Star Party or one of the other big events out
west. It means I’ve even cut back on my trips to Chiefland, Florida and the
Chiefland Astronomy Village, which is a mere six hours away.
Still, I sometimes want darker skies for imaging or visual work
than what my backyard or my club’s fairly decent dark site offer. Luckily, one
of my favorite star parties, one of the longest running star parties in the
USA, the Deep South Star Gaze
(formerly the Deep South Regional Star Gaze), is only three hours from home and
has skies that are actually slightly better than those of Chiefland.
It gets better still. While the DSSG has always been held in
the fall, for some years we’ve also been doing a less formal spring version,
the Deep South Star Gaze Spring
Scrimmage. No speakers, few door prizes, just observing. There is a meal
plan, however, and the small number of attendees compared to in the fall, 20-30
rather than 100-150, means there’s no problem getting one of the small motel
rooms in the site’s, the Feliciana Retreat Center’s,
Lodge.
Set up Thursday afternoon... |
What lights my fire about the Scrimmage is that I get a
crack at the summer/late spring objects under dark skies at a location with excellent
amenities. That and being able to hang out with my long-time Deep South
buddies. I’ve been doing the Spring Scrimmage ever since I retired from my
engineering gig, with 2016 being my fourth one.
The only problem with the Scrimmage is the weather in this
part of the country in the springtime. Year One, I got one night. Year Two I
got one good night and part of another. Year Three,last year, I didn’t get squat. That’s just part of the amateur astronomy
game, and I can have a good time under less than good skies, but for once it
didn’t seem weather would be a problem. This year, the forecasts were unanimous
that we’d have clear skies for all three nights of the event, which would begin
on Thursday, May 5th. Yee-hah!
How did I feel about the trip as I loaded up Ms. Van Pelt, the
4Runner, late Wednesday afternoon? I was pumped. It wasn’t just the amazingly beautiful
and uncharacteristically cool, crisp, and clear weather either. I was in the
mood to do a star party, more in the mood than I’d been in about a year. I
worked with a will to get all the astro-stuff in the truck, almost—but not
quite—whistling a happy tune.
My current star party rig is my SkyWatcher 120mm Pro ED
refractor, Hermione—this would be her first trip
to really dark skies—and since I would be imaging, the mount she’d be riding
would be my Celestron CGEM. I had the usual ton of other junk to load as
well—cables, cameras, gear cases, computer, etc., etc. By the time I was
finished, I was more than ready to call it an early night—well, after a glass
or two of "sarsaparilla" and Arrow on the TV.
The only slight bring down was that some business I needed
to conduct Saturday (including attending Free Comic Book Day, which wasn't a bring down at all, natch), meant I’d decided to scale the trip back from three
nights to two. I’d be onsite Thursday and Friday nights and go home Saturday
morning. Actually, that wasn’t really much of a bring down, since lately two
nights at an event seems just about right for me.
Thursday morning’s trip to the Feliciana Retreat Center,
which is nestled in the backwoods of northeastern Louisiana near Norwood, was
uneventful in the extreme. Miss Dorothy normally does not attend this event, so
I was by myself and passed the time listening to an audiobook of one of my
favorite Stephen King Novels, The Girl
Who Loved Tom Gordon. I was about halfway through the CDs, to the point where poor little Trisha is wandering the lost pathways of New Hampshire's chimney, when I drove onto the spacious observing field slightly
before noon.
FRC Lodge... |
How was gear set up? Not too bad. I’ve erected my EZ-Up tent
canopy more than a few times by myself, and have gotten pretty good at that,
but it was still nice when my old friend Walt stopped by to lend a hand. Two of
my other long-time Deep South pals, Barry and Ron, had also arrived and were, like me, getting their telescopes put together, said telescopes being,
like mine, refractors.
While this was just a small event, sure, I thought it was
telling that lens scopes outnumbered everything else by at least two-to-one. I
suppose the current incredibly reasonable prices for high quality imported Chinese
ED scopes is what is continuing to tip the table back in favor or refractors.
The CGEM is heavy enough that it is not exactly a
pleasure to mount on its tripod, but it isn’t that bad, and when I know I will be
able to leave it set up for a couple of days, not having to take it down and
cart it home at the end of one evening, it doesn’t seem bad at all. Hermione
only weighs 11-pounds and is easy to get on the CGEM and very steady on it. What really made putting the telescope and tent canopy together more pleasant than usual?
Temperatures in the lower 70s, something rare for us in May. I got all the
other junk arranged under the EZ-Up and proceeded to the Lodge to get settled
in my room.
The Lodge features motel-like rooms that are clean but not
exactly spacious. Nevertheless, Center management feels the need to cram a bunk
bed AND a single bed into almost every one, and there’s not enough space left
over for even a desk on which to put your laptop. The air-conditioners work but are old and noisy and on their last legs. So, no, not up to the level of
even a Days Inn, but a heck of a lot more comfortable and cleaner than the
average star party chickie cabin for sure. I bring along a small folding aluminum
camp table for the laptop, and I am good for a couple of days.
What the Lodge lacks as far as rooms, it more than makes up
for with its beautiful, modern-looking dining area. This part of the Lodge also
features workable (if often torturously slow) wi-fi and is where most folks hang out
during the endless days. What’s the
biggest pain with a spring star party? The freaking Daylight Savings Time. It’s
a long, weary old stretch from afternoon to eight p.m. when you can at least
get your telescope aligned. I spent the hours before supper in the dining area Facebooking,
Cloudy Nighting, and QRZ.com-ing.
One thing that has made the wait for dark a little easier to
take in past years has been lunch. That tends to break up the day a bit.
Alas, the last couple of times it’s been two meals a day, breakfast at nine and
an early (4 p.m.) supper, so the days do tend to drag.
The dining room. |
When supper came, I was reminded of one of the best things
about Deep South—the food at Feliciana. Thursday’s meal, brisket, was outstanding.
No, I didn’t dare eat the mega-carb loaded baked potato casserole, but
the excellent brisket and a large salad from the salad bar were more than
enough to fortify me for the night to come.
Out on the field as the Sun slowly, ever so slowly, began to
sink, I didn’t have a lot to do. I’d already installed the DewBuster
heater strips on Herminone’s objective and the 50mm Orion guide scope. All that
remained was to position the computer on the observing table under the EZ up,
hook cables to it and to the imaging camera, a Canon 400D, and the guide-cam,
a QHY 5-LII, and get the mount aligned.
I had an ace up my sleeve in that regard, the Celestron
StarSense alignment camera/system. This does a goto alignment on the CGEM
without my intervention, and is as accurate, easily, as the best “manual” goto
alignment I can do. Even better, the StarSense encourages me to do two
iterations of the AllStar polar alignment routine, since I don’t have to redo
the time consuming 2+4 goto alignment after each polar alignment. I just tell
StarSense to do another automatic goto alignment and twiddle my thumbs while it
does.
What’s the StarSense alignment procedure like? I temporarily
remove the guide scope, placing it in my TPI spreader's tray, and mount the StarSense camera in its place. Light off
the mount, tell the StarSense HC to do an auto-align, and away she goes. In
about three minutes the mount has gone to multiple star fields, has done
plate-solves, and I am goto aligned.
After that, if I am imaging, I do an AllStar polar
alignment, which works almost the same with the StarSense as with the old hand control.
Point at a star, the mount slews off, re-center it with the altitude and
azimuth adjusters. The StarSense HC then does another goto alignment and once
that’s finished I am done (or if I want the most accurate polar alignment I can
get with AllStar, I do another iteration of that followed by another auto-align).
When dark came on Thursday, I remounted the guide scope and focused
it by watching the brightness value of a medium bright and non-saturated star increase
on the auto-guide program’s, PHD2’s, display on the laptop. By the way, if you
have not yet switched from the old PHD to PHD2, you really should. The new version is better. Mucho better.
M3 and little NGC 5263... |
To focus the main scope I get a bright star, Arcturus Thursday
night, as small as I can get it and then sharpen up dimmer background stars by
eye. Nebulosity, my camera control program, allows me to focus on a nice big
image on the laptop rather than squinting at a tiny picture on the DSLR’s
display, and that makes focusing so much easier, y’all. For final tweaking, I
engage Neb’s fine-focus mode, clicking on a star on the laptop display, and
twitching focus till the FWHM number Nebulosity displays is as small as I can
get it.
The rest of the evening was rather anti-climactic. This
would be a night of Messier globs, with the first on the list being that gem of
spring, Coma’s M3. When the CGEM stopped slewing, M3 was dead in the center of
the frame, but I nudged it off center a bit so as to also include a cute little
galaxy, NGC 5263, in the picture. Started PHD2 guiding, and after giving it a
little while to settle down, I dialed up 180-seconds of exposure with
Nebulosity and told the program to acquire 25 subs with the Canon 400D.
After that, there really wasn’t a heck of a lot for me to
do. I would check in with Nebulosity and PHD2 occasionally, but my intervention
was never required; the software just kept clicking off sub-frames and taking
and subtracting darks. I’d brought along a pair of 10x50 binoculars and spent
some time scanning the sky. When I tried of that, I checked out my friend
Beth’s new 12-inch SkyWatcher collapsible-tube goto Dobsonian. I am glad I
downsized to a 10-inch dobbie, but must admit Beth’s scope was delivering
impressive images.
So it went for the balance of the evening. I’d choose a new
target from the list on my new observing planner program, Deep-Sky Planner 7, switch to my current fave planetarium app,
Stellarium, click on the next target, send the mount there with a CTRL-1 key combo,
and get another sequence underway. I would then set off wandering the field
again. I did take a couple of breaks and walk back to the Lodge for hot coffee.
Can you believe it? I forgot to bring along my usual stimulant of choice,
Monster Energy Drinks. Oh, well, probably coffee was better for my system than
whatever is in the Monsters.
The AT130... |
Coffee or no coffee, by just before three a.m. I had had
enough. Three targets were in the bag, M3, M5, and M10, and three is my usual nightly
goal for long exposure prime focus imaging. I shut everything down, covered the
telescope and walked back to the lodge where I watched a DVD on the laptop (the
animated Doctor Strange film) until
my eyes began to close and I fell into a deep slumber and knew nothing more till somewhat after eight.
Breakfast was at nine and was the only yucky meal I
experienced this spring, or, actually, that I’ve had over the last several
years at the FRC. The bacon was good, and the biscuits looked terrific (I
admired them from afar). The problem was instead of just doing scrambled
eggs, they made a breakfast casserole.
The idea was OK, but in addition to eggs, cheese, and sausage, they added in broccoli. Oh, I like broccoli pretty well…but
for BREAKFAST?!
After that semi-debacle, I was off to the field to dry
everything out. While the dew had not been heavy during the first part of the
evening Thursday—in fact it had been amazingly light for Louisiana—the damp had
come on as midnight approached, and the observing table was soaked by morning. Six
years of exposure to UV at sunny star parties has made the EZ-Up less than
waterproof, and it now tends to “rain” under the canopy when dew accumulates on
it. I might spray it down with Scotch-Guard, or, more likely, I may just go
ahead and replace it with a new EZ-Up. It’s lasted well, but has a few
mechanical problems now, too.
With the refractor/mount uncovered to let them dry off in
the morning Sun, I set about reconfiguring. My intention for Friday night was
to go visual. For one thing, it didn’t look as if the sky would be as
transparent as it had been Thursday evening. For another, I wanted to see what
Hermione could do visually under dark skies. Finally, stowing the imaging-related
cables, the guide scope, the guide camera, etc. would make for a quicker
get-away Saturday morning. I definitely wanted to be home by noon to get in
line for the free stuff at my LCS (local comic shop).
The first part of the day seemed to last forever. I spent
some time surfing the Internet and reading (a graphic novel, Neal Adams’ very
strange Batman Odyssey). Shortly
after noon, I closed my book and trotted back to the field. As I approached, I
could see my longtime observing companion, Pat, who'd just arrived, setting up his HEQ-5 mount and preparing to get a new telescope on that GEM.
My traveling companion... |
To say I was impressed by the AT130 (a house brand of the dealer, Astronomics) 5-inch APO that came out of that case would be an
understatement. Beautiful, robust white tube. Nice Crayford focuser (rotatable
in two places). The whole package shouted
“quality.” Frankly, what the Astronomics import (China) reminded me a lot of was
the William Optics refractors. The 130 seemed very much the big sister of my
Megrez II Fluorite (80mm). The only question in my mind was color correction. The 130 is a triplet and doesn’t use a fluorite or synthetic fluorite element (FPL-53). It opts for FPL-51
glass instead. How would that stack up?
After the 130 was on her mount, we spent a few minutes on
the field reminiscing about the good old days of Deep South Regional Star Gazes past. As we were sitting under my canopy shooting the
breeze, Barry stopped by and mentioned his club, the Pontchartrain Astronomical
Society, had some stuff to sell, including Telegizmos scope covers at great
prices. Specifically, covers for refractors.
That pricked my ears up, since my old Desert Storm Cover
simply will not fit over Hermione when she is on a German mount. Barry had two
different sizes, including one sufficient for a 6-inch f/8 telescope, which was
what I chose so I could use the cover on Big Ethel, my 6-inch achromat, as
well. The Telegizmos covers seem durable, well thought out,
and made it the task of just a few seconds to get the scopes under wraps at the
end of the evening. Recommended.
Soon enough, the stars were beginning to wink on. With
Hermione being so easy to get aligned thanks to the StarSense, I was able to
spend some time helping get Pat squared away with his HEQ-5. He’d had the mount
for a while, but for various reasons, including our many months of horrid
weather, hadn’t been able to do much with it. In particular, he’d had little
chance to play with the mount’s computer and was anxious to give that a
clean bill of health.
We got the mount, which is identical to the Orion Sirius, polar
aligned using its polar borescope, and, after a couple of false starts, we completed
a two-star goto alignment—which seemed to work better than a three-star for
some reason. When we were done, I was impressed at the way the mount put
anything we requested in the field of the 130, which was quite steady on the
mount.
The true question was about the optical quality of the new
AT130 EDT. Again, I was impressed by the telescope. Despite fairly poor seeing,
Jupiter showed plenty of detail and contrast was excellent. The same was true
with Mars despite the fact that the Angry Red One was low when we looked at it.
Certainly the scope provided beautiful wide-field views of deep sky objects.
The observing field Friday... |
How did it stack up against my SkyWatcher and Barry’s TMB?
The views in all three scopes were essentially identical. Were deep sky objects
maybe a little brighter in the 130 than in my 120 thanks to those 10 extra
millimeters? Maybe, but 10-millimeters isn’t much, and the difference was
slight. Color correction on the FPL-51 triplet seemed pretty much the same as
on my FPL-53 doublet. One other thing we concluded? The views we were getting were reminiscent of what you’d expect with a garden variety
C8, and both refractors delivered satisfying views of deep sky objects.
How did the scopes hold up against Barry’s high-toned TMB?
Very well, thank you. Again, the images in all three seemed more or less
indistinguishable to me. Would the TMB have pulled ahead on the planets if the
seeing had been better? Maybe, maybe not. It’s amazing how far the Chinese have
come in the quality of their ED refractor objectives—simply amazing.
So, I spent Friday night in relaxed fashion enjoying the planets and the brighter and more spectacular deep
sky wonders. I was having a great time and was sad when midnight began to
approach and with it the inevitable need to pull that cursed Big Switch. I
covered Hermione, returned to the Lodge, and was soon enjoying a few hours of
shuteye. But only a few; I’d need to be up again at five in the stinking a.m.
to pack.
Saturday was not exactly a treat but was bearable. I was
happy I’d stowed all the astrophoto gear away Friday morning, for sure. Biggest
bummer was packing the EZ-Up, which was soaking wet. If Thursday had been
slightly damp, Friday was well on its way to being a typical dew-heavy
southeastern spring night. I got ‘er done, though, and was on the road by 8:30,
just a little later than planned. The end of the Scrimmage for me was not the
end of the week’s astronomy fun, however.
Aftermath…
FCBD at FOS Comics... |
After the drive home and FCBD and the other business I had
to conduct, I was understandably tired on Saturday evening. BUT… It was
obviously going to be another beautiful night under the stars, and I didn’t want
to waste it sitting inside watching TV. How about a trip to the club dark site
then? I wasn’t about to repack Hermione and all her support gear, but that
didn’t mean I'd lack telescopic horsepower.
A night like this would be perfect for Zelda, my no-frills
no-goto GSO 10-inch Dobsonian. I had her, my Asus Android tablet (running
SkySafari), and a box of eyepieces in the 4Runner in no more than 10-minutes
and was on the road to the little country airstrip we use for our serious deep
sky work.
Onsite, less than 10-minutes elapsed before I had Zelda out
of the truck, on the field, and ready to rock. It wasn’t dark quite yet but
was at least dark enough to have a look at Jupiter, who was riding high in the
gloaming. It wasn’t just to be an idle look, either; I had an agenda. What I
wanted to know was how the Dob’s views would compare to what I had seen
through the refractors.
Verdict? Pretty much a wash. The seeing was no better than
it had been the previous two nights, and that no doubt prevented the 10-inch,
who has a very good mirror, from pulling ahead. Yes, there were plenty of
details when the seeing would settle down a little, and the Great Red Spot was
easy to see, but could I see anything I hadn’t seen with the lens-scopes? No. I
thought the color of the GRS was a little more saturated than in the
refractors, but the difference was not striking.
On the deep sky, on M3 specifically, there was no denying
Zelda left the refractors in the dust. Yes, you might say the stars had looked
tinier and sharper in the 120 and 130mm scopes, but the 250mm reflector just
provided more light and more stars and there was little doubt the view of the
globular cluster was “better.” That wasn’t what surprised me, however. What
surprised me was how well the refractors’ views of M3 actually held up against
those in a much larger telescope.
What else did I look at? Not much. Shortly after astronomical
twilight it became crystal clear I needed to get the heck out. Not because of Mothman, the Little Grey Dudes
from Zeta Reticuli II, or the Skunk Ape, though. The big baddies who used to
haunt me when I was alone at the dark site seem to have lost their power over
me. That’s thanks, I suppose, to all the changes I’ve gone through in the past
year.
It was the little
baddies who chased me home. The mosquitoes. They were fierce, and I’d forgotten
the bug spray. In my tired, fuzzy-thinking condition, I’d also forgotten to
bring a jump start battery along. I had nothing to power my dew zapper gun, and
my finderscope and Rigel Quick Finder would no doubt have dewed up before long.
Sunday passed uneventfully, and I thought Monday would too.
Yes, there was to be a spectacular transit of Mercury across the Sun at dawn on
that day, but the weathermen were unanimous that we’d have heavy clouds from the
event’s start to finish. I went to bed expecting nothing.
Surprise! At dawn a look out the bedroom window revealed the
sky was beautifully clear and blue. I dressed in a hurry and grabbed my most
portable combo, the SkyWatcher AZ-4 alt-azimuth mount and 80mm SkyWatcher f/11.3
achromatic refractor. Slapped a Thousand Oaks solar filter on the scope and had
a look with a 20mm wide-field eyepiece. There was the little bb that was
Mercury. Nice, complex sunspot group too. It was quite wonderful to watch the little
world’s slow progress across Sol. After Dorothy and I had taken good long looks,
I even snapped a few iPhone photos through the eyepiece.
The denouement was that the weather-goobers were eventually
proven correct. A couple of hours into the event we were completely clouded
out, but I’d seen plenty and was happy and lucky to have seen anything. That
made it a twofer for me. We’d caught the inception and the first minutes of the Venus transit in 2012 (but not much more than that
thanks to violent thunderstorms) and now Merc. Cool. All in all a very good
week astro-wise, and the most active and engaging one I’ve had in a while.
There are many more Scrimmage pictures on my FaceBook page.
Up next? More Messiers, that’s
what.
Somebody has to sponsor you to get you to come visit out west to enjoy or Bortle Scale 1 and 2 skies.
ReplyDeleteOh, been to a number of those places over the years...most notably the Idaho Star Party (really dark).
ReplyDeleteGreat review, Rod... The DSSG scrimmage was the first event with consecutive observable nights that I can recall.
ReplyDeleteAnd the broccoli omelet was too much even for a Cajun's palate!