![]() |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
the mountains in colorado. the views there are amazing. we were in
steamboat springs on vacation in june and the entire milky way was visible with the naked eye. we went to fish creek falls, which is a trail-head about five miles away from the town and like i said the views are amazing. i didn't have any instruments avaible but my eyes and my glasses. we saw 6 satalites in a time span of 15 minutes. we are moving there in december and im expecting to be amazed when i get my scope out there. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Chris L Peterson wrote:
On 16 Nov 2004 13:06:19 -0800, (Austin P) wrote: the mountains in colorado. the views there are amazing. we were in steamboat springs on vacation in june and the entire milky way was visible with the naked eye. we went to fish creek falls, which is a trail-head about five miles away from the town and like i said the views are amazing. i didn't have any instruments avaible but my eyes and my glasses. we saw 6 satalites in a time span of 15 minutes. we are moving there in december and im expecting to be amazed when i get my scope out there. That's where I live. I picked it for dark skies (some of the darkest in the world) and good quality of living- low humidity, highest temperatures rarely over 75F, and that for only a few weeks of the year, and where I live, east of the Continental Divide, very little snow or rain, and at least 300 nights a year for viewing. No snakes, no biting insects, no pests at all (except for an annual moth invasion lasting a few weeks). Well all except the rattlers, the West Nile carrying mosquitoes, the black widows, the hanta virus infected mice, the crazy deer... Wouldn't live anywhere else! The downside? The skies are pretty unsteady, so this isn't the place to come for planetary viewing! Not too bad the last couple nights. Shawn |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Chris L Peterson wrote: No snakes, no biting insects, no pests at all Colorado has plenty of pests. See [ http://www.cobar.org/ ]. ![]() |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 15:12:47 -0700, Shawn
wrote: No snakes, no biting insects, no pests at all (except for an annual moth invasion lasting a few weeks). Well all except the rattlers, the West Nile carrying mosquitoes, the black widows, the hanta virus infected mice, the crazy deer... Wouldn't live anywhere else! Yeah, but you live down in the lowlands, don't you? What- 5 or 6 thousand feet? Too much oxygen down there, anyway g. And Austin did say "the mountains of Colorado". Seriously, you get up above 8000 feet, and stay on the dry side of the divide, and there isn't much. No rattlers, almost no mosquitoes (I saw three this summer, the most ever), no black widows. We did have a case of hantavirus up here a few years ago, but that's pretty easy to avoid. Haven't run into any crazy deer yet, but you never know... National Geographic did an article on natural disasters a few years ago. From the map, this looked to be about the safest place you could live. No floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, hail. The only thing listed was a bad ice storm about once per century (ten years up here and I've never even seen a minor ice storm, however). They didn't list fires, but those can be pretty scary. I wouldn't build in the trees! _________________________________________________ Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Nothing but insane people, conspiracies, total chaos, 100 deer psi,
constant sirens, unending recession, highest rents lowest wages in the State .... just for starters. We love it here (when we arent in jail or being stalked and rumored about and talking to each other!) It's ___________. What can I say. Mark Shawn wrote: Chris L Peterson wrote: On 16 Nov 2004 13:06:19 -0800, (Austin P) wrote: the mountains in colorado. the views there are amazing. we were in steamboat springs on vacation in june and the entire milky way was visible with the naked eye. we went to fish creek falls, which is a trail-head about five miles away from the town and like i said the views are amazing. i didn't have any instruments avaible but my eyes and my glasses. we saw 6 satalites in a time span of 15 minutes. we are moving there in december and im expecting to be amazed when i get my scope out there. That's where I live. I picked it for dark skies (some of the darkest in the world) and good quality of living- low humidity, highest temperatures rarely over 75F, and that for only a few weeks of the year, and where I live, east of the Continental Divide, very little snow or rain, and at least 300 nights a year for viewing. No snakes, no biting insects, no pests at all (except for an annual moth invasion lasting a few weeks). Well all except the rattlers, the West Nile carrying mosquitoes, the black widows, the hanta virus infected mice, the crazy deer... Wouldn't live anywhere else! The downside? The skies are pretty unsteady, so this isn't the place to come for planetary viewing! Not too bad the last couple nights. Shawn |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Chris L Peterson wrote:
On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 15:12:47 -0700, Shawn wrote: No snakes, no biting insects, no pests at all (except for an annual moth invasion lasting a few weeks). Well all except the rattlers, the West Nile carrying mosquitoes, the black widows, the hanta virus infected mice, the crazy deer... Wouldn't live anywhere else! Yeah, but you live down in the lowlands, don't you? What- 5 or 6 thousand feet? Too much oxygen down there, anyway g. And Austin did say "the mountains of Colorado". Salida, at 7200 feet +- Just east of the Sawatch range, west of the Mosquitoes, and at the north end of the Sangres. We are on the "Eastern Slope" though. The continental divide is at Monarch Pass, about 20 miles west of here. Seriously, you get up above 8000 feet, and stay on the dry side of the divide, and there isn't much. No rattlers, almost no mosquitoes (I saw three this summer, the most ever), no black widows. We did have a case of hantavirus up here a few years ago, but that's pretty easy to avoid. Haven't run into any crazy deer yet, but you never know... All those critters live here. Guess we're just lucky. Shawn |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Shawn wrote:
Chris L Peterson wrote: On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 15:12:47 -0700, Shawn wrote: No snakes, no biting insects, no pests at all (except for an annual moth invasion lasting a few weeks). Well all except the rattlers, the West Nile carrying mosquitoes, the black widows, the hanta virus infected mice, the crazy deer... Wouldn't live anywhere else! Yeah, but you live down in the lowlands, don't you? What- 5 or 6 thousand feet? Too much oxygen down there, anyway g. And Austin did say "the mountains of Colorado". Salida, at 7200 feet +- Just east of the Sawatch range, west of the Mosquitoes, and at the north end of the Sangres. We are on the "Eastern Slope" though. The continental divide is at Monarch Pass, about 20 miles west of here. Seriously, you get up above 8000 feet, and stay on the dry side of the divide, and there isn't much. No rattlers, almost no mosquitoes (I saw three this summer, the most ever), no black widows. We did have a case of hantavirus up here a few years ago, but that's pretty easy to avoid. Haven't run into any crazy deer yet, but you never know... All those critters live here. Guess we're just lucky. Shawn You dogs. I grew up in Littleton and I miss Colorado more than I can say. Been dreaming a lot of nights lately about skiing. And of all the places in the world I moved to...gulp...Texas. Chris |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
starburst wrote:
Shawn wrote: Chris L Peterson wrote: snip Seriously, you get up above 8000 feet, and stay on the dry side of the divide, and there isn't much. No rattlers, almost no mosquitoes (I saw three this summer, the most ever), no black widows. We did have a case of hantavirus up here a few years ago, but that's pretty easy to avoid. Haven't run into any crazy deer yet, but you never know... All those critters live here. Guess we're just lucky. Shawn You dogs. I grew up in Littleton and I miss Colorado more than I can say. Been dreaming a lot of nights lately about skiing. And of all the places in the world I moved to...gulp...Texas. My brother in law lives in Littleton. There's not much night sky to miss there. Texas has some big dark skies and straight roads to get there. I lived in Texas for a year though. I worked in a Park Cities bike shop in Dallas, where all these rich housewives would say "Oh you're from Colorado? We have a condo in Vail". Great, thanks for sharing. I won't do that again. Shawn |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|