M92 |
I then got a bit distracted by a rustling, sure enough, our local hedgehog has decided to come see what I'm taking photos of. I watched him for a bit with the red-light which doesn't seem to bother him - then told my girlfriend (who loves hedgehogs and wants to attract more to our garden) who then came out to see our spiky friend, who then didn't like the crowd and made a run for it.
Back to the telescope, after 10 mins or so exposure on M92, I moved onto M29 and M103, who seem to be quite different from your usual cluster. These two are Open (rather than globular) and therefore look like they have a small pattern of prominent stars grouped together. Again, another 2 lots of ~10mins exposures on each of these and I moved on.
M29 |
M103 |
I felt a bit sorry for the hedgehog, so I got some mealworms we feed the birds with and put some on the ground near where he was seen the last time, hopefully to tell him we're friends not foe and wish him to return!
Having already captured the targets I initially set out to get, I used my phone to navigate the sky and see what objects were visible and were located in the clearest areas of the sky. I then added M71 - a globular cluster to my list, and was very happy that it had just about cleared the roof of my house - another 10 mins exposure!
M71 |
I then discovered on my phone an object in clear skies called M40 - a Double star. Double star? What was Messier thinking? M40 - also known as Winnecke 4 - a double star in Ursa Major; stealing this from Wiki: "one of the few real mistakes in the Messier catalog," faulting Messier for including it when all he saw was a double star, not a nebula of any sort." Still, I was happy to capture it, and to tick it off my Messier list, even if it was one of his mistakes!
I then packed away my things, left the hedgehog to roam round the rest of the garden without fear of the red-light monster with a clicking contraption, and am now very happy having had such a pleasurable and successful evening capturing the stars.