Wow, wow, wow! For those of us in the South Hampshire (UK), we've had an unprecedented weekend of fine viewing.
Warm, clear skies, little to no wind and a new Moon.
Sat morning 01:30-03:30, I spent some time simply scanning the sky with no great aim other than to try out my new TV eyepieces. I noted some very interesting objects in Lyra/Cygnus but wasn't able to accurately identify them, so I vowed to get out again this morning to further investigate.
I started earlier 11pm Sat night through to 01:30 this morning and I wasn't disappointed. Same great viewing conditions, Milky Way readily visible, shooting stars in Lyra, dozens of Satellites, a deer, two foxes and a very noisy May Bug.
I wanted to take time in Leo as this has alluded me for some time but managed to easily observe a dozen or more Galaxies. Some very faint and needed averted vision but nice also to see more than one in a low power eyepiece. This box ticking exercise made me want to move onto more interesting stuff so I picked up M64, the Black Eye galaxy on my way to Lyra/Cygnus.
I've mourned the loss of the planets and Orion but I've found a new love for Lyra/Cygnus. So much to see.
M57 Ring Nebula... amazing. Able to easily see why it is so named. M27 the Dumbell Nebula, likewise.
Both were so clear and well resolved in my 9mm (TV Nagler 255x) that I'm almost tempted to add a 6 or 5mm to my EP arsenal.
All in all, a terrific couple of evenings and conditions that I think will be hard to top!
Thanks for listening!