Coffee and astronomy update
On the coffee front, I have been enjoying great pour over cups with the Bean & Bean Rio Nights coffee. Bean & Bean are a mother and daughter specialty roaster in NYC, and this bag was part of my Trade Coffee trial. I cut back the amount from 18g coffee/300mL water to 15.x grams, and having some really good cups. For the work days, I am using Jim's Organic Coffee brewed by autodrip and taken in a thermos to work.
On the stargazing front, I finally got out under the stars for a brief look-see last night. I knew I'd need to retrain my eyes, and my eyes are older now! Observing is a skill, and when you haven't done it for years, you need to get back in practice for seeing and observing. It sounds silly, but here is an example.
Back when I first started, I tried to find galaxies, and maybe I did? What I saw was more a small, gray smudge. So small that you could lose it while trying to look at it. Then, several years later, I was working my way through an area, looking for what are known as Messier objects. Turns out, that galaxy was 1 of 3 that are in close proximity to each other when viewing. And 2 of them, including that first one, stood out like a flag planted on a hill! I remember being so excited to see 2 so easily, while the 3rd was a bit more challenging. It wasn't until working on my notes (which were in a computer planner that I have somehow lost or they got corrupted) that the program told me I'd recorded one earlier. There was my note, about how difficult it was and how uncertain I was about what I was looking at. That is when I realized that seeing and observing is a skill and that I had learned it and had no difficulty with 2 of those 3 galaxies! I had a different eyepiece, but the scope was the same small 6" reflector. It excites me to think of what I can see in the bigger scope!
And another thing I learned is planning. I didn't plan. I just walked out at 9pm, set the scope in the driveway and tried to look around. The plan last night should have been to set up my card table for the kit case, and have a chair. While the new scope's optical tube assembly is almost 4' tall, it is shorter when not looking directly up! Being bent over was no fun. I needed to be in a better position to aim the scope, which is sighting along the tube, and that meant kneeling down and then standing up and rinse and repeat. The scope is fine, the views crisp, but the user needs to think ahead more!
On the other hand, I had gone out 20 minutes earlier with just binoculars and stumbled accidently across one of my favorite asterisms, the Coathanger. It looked great in the binoculars!
Bottom line, the old adage is true: proper planning prevents poor performance!
- Eric
Put your message in a modem,
And throw it in the Cyber Sea
--Rush, "Virtuality"
Overloader of brushes, Overlander fanboy, Schickhead, and a GEM in the rough!