View Full Version here: : Astronomer romance
kittenshark
01-11-2016, 12:06 AM
I've known a number of friends who, like myself, met their other halves while doing astronomy, but I was curious to know for those of you here...
What was/is the most romantic astro-related thing that he/she has given you that started it all?
After we touched hands while I was passing him a T-ring, he gave me a copy of PixInSight.
I'm thinking of 3-D printing a miniature gold version of that T-ring to wear!
:rofl:
I would love to find this sentence in a novel!
No romance to contribute, here. Not even fantasies. :) I don't share my sky with anybody in real life.
xelasnave
01-11-2016, 10:09 AM
Bah humbug, astronomy should be done alone, in the dark and cold.
Oh good luck I am moved but enough of this mushy stuff.
I patted my dog once does that count?
Alex
OICURMT
01-11-2016, 10:14 AM
My better half says the stars are for romance and that I ruin it for her with all the scientific ramblings...
PeterM
01-11-2016, 10:37 AM
I fell in love with port under a dark starry sky, she keeps me warm on those cold winter nights... now she is known as tawny... Start with one bottle of Big Sams, then onto the Penfolds, the Grant Burge and end up with the Cockburns - that is a legit name on a bottle of Port and not something I ended up with after drinking it!
There is another bottle that Astrojunk (and maybe a few others from Astrofest) know very well and can be bought from the fruit n vegie shop at Aratula, but I can't mention her here, her initials are FGP ... she is a Good Port.
el_draco
01-11-2016, 10:52 AM
Don't tell my better half, cos it wasn't her in this instance ;)
I went to what was then a rural college in the 1980's and there was a hill behind the campus, covered in trees, with a fire tower on the top. Oddly enough, it was called "one tree hill", (which I guess will pin point it exactly for some of you). I used to walk the dirt road to the top on a regular basis and often had female company cos I was seen as a "non mauler".
One evening in mid Autumn, I went up with the daughter of a diplomat who was studying on campus. We climbed that tower and squeezed under a security gate so that we could get to a higher level. We sat down and just started talking about "stuff" and after a couple of hours of that, I glanced at the night sky. She asked me what was worth looking at, more than her, (Definitely a legitimate question!!). When I explained, she got curious and we ended up lying on that platform all night exploring the night sky. Didn' lay a finger on her but it was incredibly romantic.
We walked back down at dawn and every eyebrow in the common kitchen shot up when I opened the door, somewhat dishevelled. We both must have picked it up because she suddenly threw her arms around me and gave me a kiss that would make a lady of the night blush. When she let go, she said in a husky voice, "Please, can we do that again ALL NIGHT tonight as well!" before wiggling off suggestively. :rofl::rofl:
We did, half a dozen nights in a row, and I was a legend, for a while...:P
kittenshark
01-11-2016, 12:57 PM
Nah, fiction needs to be somewhat believable.
You just can't make this stuff up! :lol:
Do you think the lack of girls in astronomy means that it might be harder to pair up?
I've seen some pretty fierce competition among the guys when a girly girl wanders into the group. Not speaking from first-hand experience tho!
I was looking at our Facebook ads stats for our shop website, and found something interesting... our ads are served to anyone with certain affinities and interests (mostly astronomy and related interests), and for most part it is equal across genders, but the big difference is who's clicking on the ads--
Girls in their early teens have been clicking a lot more on the ads, but after about 18 and early 20s it drops dramatically. For the boys they don't seem to care much in their early to mid teens, but then the clicks grow exponentially as they get older through their 20s to the late 50s.
One wonders what the situation is here! So if you're in your late teens, you'd probably have better luck with finding an astro-partner of the opposite sex! :party:
Now you tell me?!
Very interesting stats, though. :D
I wonder what makes the young girls click on the ads??? Do they come with pretty boys or pink unicorns or something?
(I'm a girl. I'm allowed to throw dirt :P )
Love Rom's nerdy legendary romance at One Tree Hill college. :)
My (female) path to astronomy needed a big push in general emancipation and liberation from long-adopted expectations before "it" could happen to me.
I was 45 when I finally dared to buy a telescope.
I thought about it (very rarely) before that time but adhered to the rule that my brain is just not good enough to understand all the physics and other science required BEFORE buying a scope.
"Just do it and see how it goes" was a frame of mind I was lucky enough to develop all of a sudden due to going and living abroad on my own at age 38.
Nowadays, I would still not consider pairing up with an astronomer.
My take of the matter is not through-and-through scientific and my joy would be in danger if someone kept telling me about my stupid mistakes and idiotic ideas.
Only when considering going to a dark site I miss (being) a man.
deanm
01-11-2016, 09:15 PM
Super.
Hey peter it is funny that you mention that port that you cant mention here. :D
I had never heard of until someone gave me a bottle on Thursday just gone.
And you are right ?GP it is too.;)
Leon:thumbsup:
Attention to detail in girls's brains is higher than in boys' when growing up.
So if something like your ads appears in a girl's news feed she actually SEEs it and wonders why it is that it appeared in her news feed.
So she clicks it.
Boys don't click cause they overlook it, they don't see any significance related to their expectations of what they will find in the news feed - so their brains discard the ad altogether.
Older girls still see the ad - but now they're more educated, internet-wise, and do not click it anymore. Because they recognize an inevitable but ultimately uninteresting ad which has nothing to do with their true interests.
Internet-wise also means, they now know that clicking is possibly dangerous.
Whereas older boys click the ad now because their brains have caught up with the female attention to detail and they now go "Oh, an ad in my news feed!!!"
And of course, they're more technically inclined and hence click because the ad is interesting to them.
ergo: no decreasing interest in girls. hence: not a bigger chance to pair up with a juvenile in the realm of astronomy.
opens up an area for research:
how can advertising be made successful on FB when targeting young male brains?
Blinking ads, exploding ads, noisy ads - that's what you could look into to promote your business :D
Wavytone
01-11-2016, 10:13 PM
Hmmm... quite early I discovered girls have other ideas when outside on a nice night in the dark... they get all cosy and cuddly - forget about the telescopes :rofl:
If I'm going observing last thing I want is the g/f (or wife) along too.
SimmoW
02-11-2016, 08:04 AM
My new partner makes me hot coffees or soups when coming with me in the field. Helps me set up, then lets me snuggle into her and warms me up when i return very late to bed!
She loves seeing me process the imagesand even helps a bit with versions/opinions. But shes not that fussed with the single subs during the night. Yep, she's a keeper..
batema
02-11-2016, 08:17 AM
Upon receiving my Celestron C8 in 1999 I woke up at 3am and looked at Saturn. I was so excited I woke my wife up and she came and looked at it. The next night I set it up again and the seeing was amazing so I woke my wife up and told her that Saturn was even more impressive and she should hop up and have another look. She replied by saying why do I need to get up to see Saturn when I can roll over anytime and see Uranus.
Romance.........?
StuTodd
02-11-2016, 09:15 AM
Just make sure both are never there at the same time..:prey:
blink138
02-11-2016, 10:05 AM
oh rom that is a ripper!!
pat
goober
02-11-2016, 10:59 AM
Golly, I thought my secret crush on Carolyn Porco had got out there. Relieved ... :whistle:
PeterM
02-11-2016, 12:27 PM
When its empty Leon keep the bottle...refill it with any Tawny of any price ... it will always be Good Port!
kittenshark
02-11-2016, 02:10 PM
Hmm all possibilities... I don't collect customer data as they buy stuff (I think it's kinda creepy to do that) but often the women who come through our doors are buying telescopes as a gift for the kids or hubby/boyfriend.
I don't really serve a broad audience with the ads, so the people clicking on them have some sort of interest in astronomy already.
Of course, it could all just be a pattern within normal FB user behaviour like you said.
Targeting young male brains? That's easy! Just put an ad featuring girl in a bikini using a scope? :lol:
el_draco
02-11-2016, 03:43 PM
Male explanation: Boys filter crap better than girls.
Male explanation: After a while, girls learn how to filter crap as well as boys.
Male explanation: Morbid curiosity... How dumb can an ad really be?
Nah...:question:
Nah... :question: Tell them its a chick magnet.. ;) Was for me!
Seriously! Lots of generalisations here :rolleyes:
I get tired of children being stereotyped like this. I have tutored many children of both genders from prep to uni level. Nurture has a far greater impact than nature in this area. Teach a child to focus on intelligent things, and they generally do! The spectrum of ability and gullibility, is pretty even in both genders IMHO...
el_draco
03-11-2016, 11:23 AM
Whats the best ever pick-up line?
"Spend the night with me honey, and I guarantee you'll see stars...." :lol:
Used that one once...
She was highly amused... :P
The most romantic thing involving astronomy and my wife is when she says to me in a voice as sweet as honey,
"Looks like a nice night, why don't you get the scope out. ..
followed by
...cause there's something on TV I'm going to watch." :sadeyes:
RobinClayton
06-11-2016, 06:21 PM
My wife did buy me a telescope for my birthday. I had not realised until then that astronomy was so within reach of normal people. Then on our anniversary she suggested somewhere in the country to stay and actually found a dark site to view. Since then, she only occasionally looks through the scope and is disappointed by the faintness of the object. She has no idea why i am excited by something so faint, but at least she is happy that I am off the computer for a while.
el_draco
06-11-2016, 06:56 PM
Well, if the lady in your life thinks everything is to faint... you need to get a 20" light bucket so that she is no longer disappointed... PERFECT... and so romantic! ;)
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