posted on Apr, 8 2007 @ 05:20 PM
I'm another amateur astronomer here. I've even taken a college course in Astronomy with a lab portion as part of it. I got to observe some deep
sky objects such as star clusters and a number of other interesting objects using some big expensive scopes. I don't remember what brand of
telescopes they were since it was several years ago. I was surprised I could see that much in the middle of Raleigh, NC.
I've also taken a number of astrophotos. It's surprisely easy to do with the old style film but I haven't tried it with any of the new digital
equipment. I was surprised to see the nebula in Orion show up on a pic I took. I believe if you leave the exposure time less than 30 to 40 seconds,
you don't notice any star movement in the pic. I have a neat looking picture of a landscape with stars in the sky. Looks like daytime except for
the stars overhead. One of these days, I'm going to stumble upon wherever I stashed those pics.
Good luck with your new hobby. My first experience with star gazing was way back in elementary school when someone came to school and showed some of
us students via his telescope, Saturn, and a few other objects.
I'm not up to date on scopes, equipment, etc. but still have a 7 x 50 pair of binoculars useful for general star gazing. It's been awhile since I
was in a really dark sky area but I'll agree the view was simply amazing. You can easily see the milky way galaxy. It's actually a bit hard to
recognize normal stars since the whole sky is filled up with bright stars.
Good luck star gazing on your new hobby.