Clear skies from 5 PM onwards so I made a very ambitious plan to observe multiple targets. Had some issues with polar aligning and GOTO but managed to observe:
The Crab Nebula, Orion Nebula, Bode’s Galaxy, Cigar Galaxy, Messier 103, Messier 32, and as a nice bonus: Messier 77 aka Cetus A.
The mind boggling distance of Cetus A is 47 million light-years.
I started my session with a very long polar alignment in sharpcap and aiming at random spots in the heavens with the hope of platesolving my way to glory. When finally it worked I got to capture the ethereal glow of Messier 27 and Messier 57.
I also had a long look at Triangulum (Messier 33) but didn’t manage to capture it well. My plan was to observe much longer but it got too cloudy and my platesolving started to fail again. There is a lot to say about Messier 33, but watching another galaxy like this is something very, very special.
Now that I have everything figured out with the new equipment I hope to explore many more objects. However, with Mars opposition around the corner I might take out the dob again soon.
Whilst platesolving I also got photobombed by this guy:
I had two wonderful nights with little to no clouds and managed to:
Align my polar scope
Polar align manually with my knees in the wet grass
Get decent tracking!
Give up on polar aligning manually and buy the 10 USD sharpcap pro license
Use sharpcap pro to polar align – this is so easy.
Align the scope, which was a big hit and miss
Making a total mess of connecting sharpcap, stellarium and synscan together to the mount
Confusing my scope, laptop and eventually also myself
Not collimating the scope resulting in horrible stars on my laptop screen
When I ordered the scope to go to Albireo, I felt some relief when I saw two little diamonds in the sky. Unfortunately those were two stars slightly west of Vulpecula. Still pretty close though.