Yeah MASSIVE shout-out to francopoli, whom I sincerely hope is happy wherever he is. I will never be half the astronomer he is. Seeing as I'm at sea level in Seattle, there's very little reason to try. However, I will gladly spill whatever tips I can all over anyone else foolish enough to stand up a tripod. (1) There are upgrades that will help you now that will help you later if you take this further. Spotting scopes are straight garbage, and the spotting scope in your friend the Tasco is garbage squared. Telrads are spectacularly useful and are available on Amazon. It is rare you see all five stars filled in on a product with over 400 reviews that has remained entirely unchanged since the '80s. If your scope takes 1.25" eyepieces, there are no eyepieces you can buy that are worse than the one you have. Not only that but simply throwing red and yellow filters on the end of it will radically improve your planetary astronomy. Computer modeling kicked the shit out of optics starting in the mid-late '90s to the point where modern glass is astoundingly better. Based on a quick perusal of the internet it looks like the weak point in that scope is the right angle prism. Which is optional and can be replaced. (2) Your viewing is probably better because you're at a higher altitude. It matters. Of course you're also viewing the moon which is always bright enough that it doesn't much matter. Humidity also screws with stuff. (3) Greenbelts on the outskirts of town aren't a bad place to see planets. However, greenbelts on the outskirts of college campuses aren't a bad place to see friendly girls who will happily walk up to you and look through your eyepiece. It surprises me that serial killers have yet to figure out how harmless men look with a telescope. Especially if you only know enough to fill them in 30 seconds worth and don't geek out about it. Not saying it will get you laid? But it will get you conversations with people who wouldn't normally talk to you. Keep it up. Someone has to keep us in astronomy photos.
Damn. Deactivated last August. In case work ever finds you in a less light polluted city, this is a nice tool for finding good spots for clear skies. (1) Booyah. IIRC the diameter is a measly 1/2", and it'd really be a nostalgia/feel-good DIY fix more than anything. cloudynights (3rd link) was one of the first places I got the idea for jerry-rigging. btw, LOL (in awe) @ how awesome this forum user's setup is: Using the dinky thing AS A FINDER. Scrolling around amazon now for Telrads. Brilliant point about use of filters. That concept didn't transfer from in-class lecture brain to real-life brain. (DOH) This is new info to me, and added to the list. Also, in hindsight, microfiber cloth would have done wonders for the quality, too. (2) This, I don't have an accurate read on given IL desert has ~100m more on my city (Northern FL) on average. Though I can accurately write that the humidity was out in full force last night - more than the usual in FL. (3) I found the spots based on other redditors' suggestions. I have yet to see anyone else out there yet. Then again, 'small' city = small sample size = small chance of seeing people, etc. A meteor shower+picnic sort of date is in my back pocket, but that's stretch until very comfortable with someone [who is comfortable with being up at peak hours].Seeing as I'm at sea level in Seattle, there's very little reason to try.
I will gladly spill whatever tips I can all over anyone else foolish enough to stand up a tripod.
it looks like the weak point in that scope is the right angle prism. Which is optional and can be replaced.
A+ idea. That's how I proposed to my wife. A meteor shower+picnic sort of date is in my back pocket
Yeah, we were a day past the peak of the perseids and not quite at the right time of night, but we drove to a really dark place and we still saw a handful, and the night was wonderful. But no, I didn't have a camera that could take pictures either of meteors or of us in the dark.
Not all memories need to be set by equipment. I drove up to the mountains to watch the quadrantids once. Brought the gear. Got great shots. One burst so low I heard it. Took the film into the lab, waited three days, heard nothing, dropped in, was told "yeah, big bummer, notjing exposed." I asked to see my film. They pulled it out of the garbage. And there, on the light table, exposures ruined by uncleaned developer, were all my meteor shots. But since it wasn't puppies or some shit, their tech had decided it was garbage. Never went back. They went under. But that night? The night of the meteor I heard? The meteor I smelled? It's become ruined streaks pulled out of the garbage in my memory.