David, get your SN and print out a map for a small patch at zenith, and one at say 45º altitude, then one for say within 5-10º or closer to horizon, for all around the same time (well after sunset, say 2 hours at least) get the chart to go down to 8th mag at least (this is for a naked eye test) - and then find and clearly mark a number of stars at intervals of .1 of a mag at around the 7th mag - 8th mag for zenith - so close to 7.1, 7.2 ish and so on - I use a seperate piece of paper for details of stars mag/name/ and just number the stars on the printed chart as it gets confusing otherwise. The stars at 45º wouldnt be as high a mag as zenith so go down to around 6th mag - for the horizon even less -
also the bortle scale evn tho it is for northern hemisphere is still useful for describing to others the conditions of your observing location - it makes it very easy to picture for a person familiar with the scale :-)
http://www.frostydrew.org/observator...ays/bortle.htm
atmospheric phenonema like the gegenschien, zodiacal light, skyglow are very good indicators
for instance we were on a comet imaging trip in outback SA once and a quarter moon came up later on - just as it was rising we saw these highly defined fingers of light creep very slowly along both horizons simultaneously from the east/moons direction - they were about maybe 3-5º in thickness - they were very dense and strongly defined milky white and quite seperated from the inky black - they eventually met on the western horizon and then the moon came up - i think that lasted about 10 - 15 minutes or so from memory - one of the bizarest things I have ever seen

I think it was airglow - not sure
heres an exert from my notes
" We have never seen a moonrise like that either!!, amazing thing from a really dark place, with fingers of light stealthily encircling the dark horizons till they met in the west with sharply clear lines of distinction between light and dark - not unlike some aurora a bit - very nice - felt like we were on the moon almost, not surprising though with that sort of outback country. Would go to see just that again anyway!"