Hi Draco,
I would signal a word of caution re the Bushnell spotting scope you refer to.
I have no viewing experience with this spotting scope, however, 60mm aperture with reasonable optics will give good views of the moon, Jupiter's disc with the 4 moons and a very small Saturn with its rings and Titan. I think the other moons of Saturn will be too faint for this scope.
Of concern though is the table top mount combined with a straight through eyepiece view. Generally the higher the elevation of the target the better the views will be as you are looking through less atmosphere. In practical terms elevations above 30 degrees are needed for better viewing. Have a careful think about how comfortable the view will be if the target object is high in the sky. Find an old cardboard tube or fashion one out of paper, take it outside and try looking through the tube when holding it in the position that the mount would be supporting it. Have a good experiment to see if it will work for you.
As an alternative, does this spotting scope come in a 45deg angled eyepiece version? This would give you a reasonable compromise - still useable for terrestrial and a more comfortable introduction to the night sky. That is how I started and it worked quite well until I wanted to see more - I now have dedicated astronomical telescope and retain the spotting scope for daytime terrestrial viewing. Just check that the mount head allows the scope to reach good elevations - many terrestrial spotting scopes will only allow very limited viewing elevations. It will not be possible to use this spotting scope successfully without some form of mount.
Good luck.
Steve
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