Thread: seeing Polaris
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Old September 6th 04, 12:08 AM
Jan Owen
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It seems like that is about right, here (Sonoran Desert of Arizona), too
(about an hour, maybe ten minutes less, after sunset)...

But there ARE other ways...

Are you observing from your back yard? Or from a deck or patio?

If so, what you might want to do, and what I have done at my last two
houses, is set your scope up on the patio or deck, level it, polar align
it, and mark the spot where each of the feet of your tripod or portable
pier were sitting (circle them with a magic marker, or some such).

Then, next time, all you have to do is take the scope out, put the
corresponding foot down centered on the respective circle, and VOILA! You
ARE polar aligned (not for photographic purposes, of course, but plenty
good enough for visual observing)!

If you observe from your YARD, try this:

I put stepping stones in my yard, leveled, and marked just like the patio
deal above.

So I just take the scope out, put the feet (or in my actual case, screw
down the leveling screws on the JMI big wheel wheeley bars onto the marks
on the stepping stones, level the tripod, and VOILA! Good enough for
visual observing... And I mean, if I go in the house for half an hour,
and come back out, the object will STILL be in the field... Again, not
good enough for photography, of course, but plenty good enough for visual
observing.
--
Jan Owen

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"The Ancient One" wrote in message
...

"Moon River" wrote in message
newswM_c.67610$S55.10721@clgrps12...
How long after sunset can you pick out Polaris with the unaided eye

for
polar aligning?
The best I seem to do is almost an hour or 50 minutes after sunset.


Polaris never moves as seen from Earth, it remains in the same location

24
hours a day.