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Patterson
06-06-2013, 05:54 PM
After 55 years of observing I occasionally wonder what I would do if suddenly I was 10 again in this modern world of amateur astronomy. Yes, as I said in an earlier post, I'd probably still grind a mirror and build my own first telescope. But something else too, something barely thought of in 1955, I'd get involved in the International Dark Sky program.

This Isn't just selfishness, being stuck in Melbourne with an AP refractor and too old to lug it to a dark site. I was brought up in a little town just outside of Toronto. We didn't even have street lights and the glow of Toronto on the eastern horizon was no big deal back then. I was 5 years old when my parents brought me home one moonless winter night and I casually looked up as I walked in.

I don't have to describe to anyone at this forum what a night sky looks like from a dark site when seeing and transparency are at their peak. Moreover, like many young people I had eyes like a hawk, a fact subsequently confirmed a few years later when I split the famous double-double in Lyra looking straight at it, no averted vision! On that night I was probably seeing stars to magnitude 6.5. That was it. My parents had to drag me into the house and I was hooked for life.

I was lucky. Now, with light pollution swamping the planet, I seriously wonder whether I'd be writing to this forum now if I hadn't been born in the country. The stars would not have had a chance to astonish and astound the imagination and curiosity of a youngster. That's almost a tragedy. Quite apart from the aesthetics of it, astronomy gives one a certain perspective on things which few other subjects can.

Which is why I'm horrified when I see those photos of earth from space showing the night side bathed in huge splotches of white. So much money being wasted to destroy one of the profound experiences a human can have. And so I'd join a dark-sky organisation somewhere and do a little more than send a cheque every year, which is what I do now. So much to lose. So much to gain.

Ric
07-06-2013, 02:17 AM
I agree Wayne, so much is being lost in the quest to light up the planet.

I feel very lucky to be able to step of the verandah and enjoy wonderfully dark skies. The only time I see the glow of Canberra is on a cloudy night when the reflection comes of the clouds.

ZeroID
07-06-2013, 09:35 AM
Agreed with all your comments. I think the only redeeming thing is that with modern technology youngsters are now bombarded with more information and possibilities to learn and explore than I (we) were. You just hope they can filter out all the rubbish and overload it also brings.

I'm heading down south weekend of the 15th into NZ's Waikato farmland where my daughter and her family have recently moved. I am taking at least two scopes, there are still dark skies to be found but they are diminishing fast.

Patterson
07-06-2013, 09:25 PM
Thanks for your comments Ric and Brent. You fellas are fortunate. Once about 15 years ago my wife and I rented a cottage in country Victoria for a weekend. Didn't take my scope, but the sky there was so clear with no moon I spent over an hour just eyeballing things. Even my wife (a non-astronomer) was impressed. She'd never seen the Milky Way before and that night it was spectacular. Having observed in the northern hemisphere most of my life, I occasionally miss my old favourites, Ursa Major, Draco, etc. but must admit the southern hemisphere is something else. Overwhelming.