Thanks Dean. I have been to Israel a number of times but only for some weeks visit before this opportunity. An elevator on "Shabbat service" is an interesting sight. Love Israeli breakfasts in the hotel.
Now the fun begins - I'm about to test out my travel insurance - having to cancel a major European trip in Oct/Nov which is already booked and paid for!
Shipment has gone. I got enthusiastic and shipped the SDM, the C8 (with stand and wedge), a four inch refractor, my 20x80 binos and a Televue Telepod mount (fitted with Argo Navis). Plus plenty of eyepieces and accessories. Well, five years is a long time! Even then, quite a deal of equipment has gone into storage (four 8" Newtonians included!)
We fly out on Monday. I am sure looking forward to the current 30+ deg temperatures at destination! (given we have shipped all warm clothes apart from a light vest each. And I have had a "summer" haircut some days ago!)
I'll try to check in with you all soon after we get settled.
Hello, I'm here. It's hot and humid! Normal for August.
Not many stars to see in these light pollution-soaked skies, but I can see sights I haven't seen much before.
Still settling in and awaiting my internet attachment - currently "hot-spotting" via my Galaxy S2.
I'll update in the future. My scopes are probably still crossing the equator in the shipping container. Hopefully not sinking to the bottom of the Indian Ocean
What a privilege to have the opportunity to live in the country so central to world history. Stay safe; I imagine there would some places best to stay clear of.
If you get the chance to visit some of the Biblical sites, it would be great to see some pictures on IIS!
In 30 min, the Israeli wharfies should start unloading the container ship which has carried my container from trans-shipment in Singapore. Hopefully a customs official in a good frame of mind waves it through, then a trip by truck up the coast with possible delivery Sunday (first day of the working week). We cannot wait - fingers and toes crossed that the contents survived the long trip.
Hopefully also take possession of a car in the next week. The car I had wanted (Mazda 3 hatch) and measured up in Australia to be sure it would fit my scope - sadly, no stock will be in the country before my time period runs out to buy it tax-free. So I've had to take a different make (Toyota - the Auris, which is effectively a Corolla hatch). I'll make my scope fit!
Been studying the maps, the national parks guides and Google Street View which is pretty comprehensive in Israel. Have identified lots of potential viewing locations ranging from 30 min to 3 hours away. And some very interesting country and history to be seen on my only whole day off - Saturday. Friday will probably become observing night - but that is Shabbat (the Sabbath day) - could be problematic in some places.
All quite an adventure for a boy from coastal Queensland.
Shipment arrived last Monday. All carried up two flights of stairs. managed to get to the telescopes today. Looking good - no evidence of any problems so far.
Unpacked the SDM. Several layers of tough bubble wrap, then a cardboard layer then a few more layers of bubble wrap. It is looking fine. I had strapped the mirror box to the rocker box. I packed the mirror separately in the GSO supplied box and I'm sure it is fine. Upper tube assembly also looks good in its custom box (to which I added additional packing).
I zeroed the temperature and humidity gauges before packing. Today it read maximum temperature 40.8 deg C and maximum humidity 70%. From inside several layers of packing. So far all the electronics that I shipped is working well - TV, DVD players and 5.1 sound system are working well, as are the washing machine, dryer, microwave etc.
Now I need a car - hopefully it will be available early this week before the next round of holidays in Israel. I've been here 6 weeks - this will be the fourth holiday day or days since I arrived.
Eric - when you get a car, *never* drive through a religious neighbourhood during Shabbat.
We accidentally did once, in Jerusalem, and got stoned (& not in a pleasant way!) - even with an Oz flag in the rear window to attempt to atone for any unintended transgressions.
They collect stones the day before (to avoid performing 'work' on Shabbat) & apparently it's okay to throw them at people violating the Sabbath because this is punishment, doing G*d's work...!
Dean
(& you can afford a car?!! We bought a 20-year old VW for Au$3000, and the gearbox blew after 100 km!)
Finally, the SDM saw northern skies tonight. I found a place 30 min from Haifa. Still not good - too much passing traffic and local hoons/boy-racers. Was visited by the local constabulary after a couple of hours - someone would have called in "suspicious behaviour" - but they were quickly satisfied. Also dark at that spot meant an SQM reading of 19.8!
Started the night with much cloud. Took me quite a while to work out the bright stars in the gaps. Wonder if I should have done a head stand to work it out - but I got it sorted and the Argo Navis didn't miss a beat after that. SDM is in good shape after all the travels. Restored the Primary to the mirror cell and it needed a bit of collimation. But all good. Clouds cleared after a couple of hours. Readily resolved E and F stars in the Trapezium while it was only some 15 deg up from the horizon. Happy with that.
Polaris is nothing exciting, is it. But I didn't know it was a double.
However, most exciting - check the pic - sorry the phone camera would not focus. The scope is pointed at M31, which I have never seen much above the horizon in Australia! I'm looking forward to darker skies for it alone. I did try to pull NGC 253 out of the murky and rather bright southerly sky, but couldn't do it.
Temperature got down to 12 deg by 10:30pm (Sunset 4:30pm at the moment) - pretty cold for here, given the temperature didn't drop below 25 deg overnight two nights ago!
Finally, the SDM saw northern skies tonight. I found a place 30 min from Haifa. Still not good - too much passing traffic and local hoons/boy-racers. Was visited by the local constabulary after a couple of hours - someone would have called in "suspicious behaviour" - but they were quickly satisfied. Also dark at that spot meant an SQM reading of 19.8!
Started the night with much cloud. Took me quite a while to work out the bright stars in the gaps. Wonder if I should have done a head stand to work it out - but I got it sorted and the Argo Navis didn't miss a beat after that. SDM is in good shape after all the travels. Restored the Primary to the mirror cell and it needed a bit of collimation. But all good. Clouds cleared after a couple of hours. Readily resolved E and F stars in the Trapezium while it was only some 15 deg up from the horizon. Happy with that.
Hi Eric,
It's been a long journey but great to hear that you were finally able to get the
SDM out for first northern light.
Perhaps between doing burn-outs, one of the local hoons thought you looked
up to mischief? Dobbed in for owning a Dob so to speak.
Great to hear that your Argo Navis was able to help resolve what otherwise looks
all topsy-turvy at those latitudes. I am aware of a few others installed there in Israel
so nice to know yours will be in good company.
Though your SQM reading of 19.8 is probably less of an indication of the quality
of the observing skies at your spot but more of an indication of how far
civilization has advanced since the invention of agriculture in the
Middle East 10,000 years ago, nevertheless you faired better than back here in
Sydney where it was overcast and rain last night.
I've now checked out what the light pollution map shows to be the darkest location in northern Israel. Took a group of 11 newbies there and set up with binoculars, the C8 and the SDM.
Better than previous, but still not good. SQM came down to 20.6 at 2am. No nearby lights apart from red aircraft warning lights on several nearby towers. But we were up at some height and looking around the horizon I could probably see several hundred thousand houses, shops etc. within 15 km radius. Clouds came over occasionally and they were lit from below - white.
I finally was able to take a good look at that part of the sky which I've never been able to spend time observing before. And everything I do know is upside down here! Pleasingly, the Argo Navis still finds everything - it's not confused
But I had many excited people observing through a telescope for the first time: 3 day old Moon; Jupiter, Mars, Saturn after midnight, Orion nebula and a handful of galaxies and a few globulars. We finished off the night as Alberio rose for a final nice view.
The seeing was quite reasonable, I was holding 300x much of the night in the SDM with a 5mm eyepiece. But only at higher scope elevations - the air here is full of haze from dust, I estimate 19 days out of 20. E & F stars nicely separated in the Trapezium. A number of Saturn's small moons quite sharp. Also dark enough so that most of the first-time observers were seeing all three galaxies of the Leo Triplet when they reached the meridian (NGC 3628 was the challenge of course).
The most enthusiastic of them agreed we have to head for the Negev Desert - that's the next goal.
I made it there last weekend. A scouting trip but with a bit of acting like a tourist as well.
Set up my 20x80s (Argo Navis-directed of course ) to have a first look at the skies. The photo is close to where I set up, but back about 20m from that 300m drop cliff down into the Ramon Crater. Spectacular place and amazing country.
I could see the dome of one of Tel Aviv University's observatories just over the hill behind me to the West.
A fair light dome from little (5,700 population) Mitspe Ramon to the East, but pretty good skies overhead and to the South and West. SQM meter down to 21.1 around 11pm.
Compared to northern Israel that is plagued with poor visibility mainly due to dust, visibility was very good here.
Looks like a promising location for a few visits a year. Just a longish (3 hour) drive on extremely busy and fast highways to contend with.
That looks stunning.
Thanks for the update Eric, glad you're able to find a great spot to observe from.
Keep us informed and take plenty of pics.
Stay safe.
I'm persisting Here we are - New Moon Friday night in May in about the darkest spot in Northern Israel. And look! I found a slab on which to set up.
Just a few (thousands, unfortunately) of folks nearby, as the second photo shows.
SQM meter got down to 20.3 overnight. Only about a third of the sky was noticeably dark. Light domes crept up into most of the rest and washed it out somewhat.
I was showing a number of new observers what could be seen. Had one Northern Hemisphere amateur with me.
It turned out to be a brilliant evening, even with quite a heavy dew forming. Weather was excellent. Dust levels were acceptable. Seeing was amazingly good - I started with Jupiter and the GRS was very well defined - I've never had great success observing it. Also a very sharp shadow transit under way. Later the moon, probably Io, appeared as a pimple on the limb and cleanly lifted off! Later in the night the good seeing was repeated on Saturn - banding and polar variation clearly visible. Cassini division clear all the way round the front - just brilliant. We were working at 300 magnification (with a 5mm eyepiece) and I started adding barlow. x2 gave a better view. x3 didn't improve the view but it didn't fall apart and become unusable. Goodness - 900 magnification - I cannot remember getting there before now. The planet fairly whipping across the field of view but I was successfully hand tracking with the SDM - a simply marvellous telescope.
However the sky quality didn't give galaxy and globular cluster views that thrilled me - but the first time observers were excited. I also worked through the brighter nebulae and for some, my trusty DGM NPB filter provided a much nicer view.
I had also inserted a user catalog in the Argo Navis with selected double stars - a sort of "Goldilocks" collection - not too dim, not too close together, not too far apart, not too different in magnitude and, where possible, with colour variations (look up 24 Coma Berenices). That worked a treat and interested the observers.
One last thing to try. Omega Centauri rose to 10 deg elevation to the south and I was pleased when I could get a general view of it through the mush and dust in the air. Then I could swing the scope to M13. The Northern Hemisphere amateur agreed that yep, OC was significantly bigger.
My friends trickled away during the night for the hour drive home. I watched a lovely crescent Moon rise, then the Sun rise to shine into the depths (>200m below sea level!) of the Jordan Valley. Waited an hour or so to get most of the dew off the scope, then packed up and drove home - a happy camper!