Thanks all for your kind responses!
I hope you all had a very Merrry Christmas also!
Upon awaking yesterday morning I enthusiastically opened up each of the boxes containing the telescope parts, though it wasn't until later in the day that I found time to assemble everything.
Although my "first light" viewing was met with scattered clouds and even complete cloud cover at one point in the evening, I was quite thankful that to be out under the stars, getting some real views through the new scope wherever the clouds were not
Still getting used to everything being reversed in the scope view and the associated difficulty of tracking in the right direction. The finderscope really made the job much easier once I aligned it with the scope. Even when trying to navigate from one point to another I'd sometimes lose my place and have to dive back to the finderscope to locate it again
Got to see the Great Nebula in Orion as a
real shape through the scope, rather than just a slight blur through binoculars which was amazing! I attempted to view the nearby Horsehead Nebula (a long time favourite of mine) but I'm convinced this may not be possible at this aperture. Guess I'll save it for AstroImaging later on.
Jupiter provided some excellent viewing, along with four of its moons (most I could ever spot was two in the binoculars). I did observe that the image of Jupiter was not clear but shimmering, which I would put down to either bad seeing (combined with being low on the horizon by the time the clouds cleared)
and being directly over a neighbours roof. So not ideal conditions.
(To the more experienced observers, was the seeing quite bad last night?)
The moon provided some breathtaking images compared to what's possible with binoculars.. although I
definitely need to get a filter for this type of viewing. The thing is astoundingly bright! I know it's not the right way but I did use a pair of sunglasses to try to cut down on some of the incoming light to manage a look without going blind.
Andrew, I just realised, it was not you who got the same scope as me, but me the same scope as you

Actually, it was your post earlier this month in the classifieds that prompted me to look into the Skywatcher in the first place! Is it the Black Diamond flex-tube you ended up with?
Cathy, which brand is your new scope? How did you and your family find your first night out under the stars?
Thanks for the invite to the Observing Forum Suzy, I'll be sure to check it out.
Looks like the weather is going to be a big shocking for the next few days so we might be bound to the pc and books for the time being. Also for those of you (like me) also just starting out, make sure you check out Stellarium (
www.stellarium.org) I cannot rate it highly enough! It is completely free software which shows you the night sky exactly as you would see it at your location and time. I take my touch screen laptop out with me now instead of a star map. Perfect!
Happy viewing to you all.