The Green Gazette - 2022 Final Issue

Page 11

Skywatch with Bill Irwin

S

ummer observing! Stargazing has its solitary phase—just you and the stars, and its social phase—fellow observers, groups, and star parties. Both aspects feed the other. In a group, it’s great to have another observer who can find something worth looking at, while you hunt up something new. The covid thing has really put a crimp into the social side. I look up at the familiar constellations and now I see “the mask” and “the syringe” and occasionally catch a glimpse of a “convoy” of dreaded Starlink satellites. Fortunately, the stars are far away from my creative license. My father once said, trying to be objective, “Stars are just points of light. What is so interesting about points of light?” Well, a television or computer image is just a massive aggregation of points of light. What’s

so interesting about that? I can guarantee that the stars are at least as interesting as a Sherlock Holmes movie, especially the older ones, starring Jeremy Brett. And probably more interesting than Skywatch, from which, by now, you will have deduced feeble attempts to make it funny. Well, the universe is mostly empty space, after all, waiting for something to fill it. Most of the planets will be low in the southeastern morning sky as summer comes, and they will make their way slowly toward the south and into the evening sky as fall approaches. That should make for good observing as they are less affected by the brighter skies around solstice. Mars is heading for an opposition December 8. It will not be as close as recent oppositions, but it will be much higher in the sky, which makes telescopic observing easier. Even with

a really good telescope, you will come away appreciating how small and far away it is. It’s unlikely that you will get the feeling you are being watched but being able to make out some detail and the realization that you are looking at a world with a solid surface make it well worth it. Don’t forget to just look at the moon. It’s in the darker side of the sky this time of year, and you can catch a glimpse of the summer milky way, cascading down thru Sagittarius and the galactic centre. Then you can go back indoors and watch Sherlock Holmes and the points of light. For more info contact me at Bells Lake Observatory: irwin8sound@gmail.com. -GG

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Articles inside

The Journey to be Greener Never Ends

1min
page 40

Green Gazette Musings

2min
page 38

Opinion: Public Open House on Logging Development Plans in Horsefly, BC

1min
page 41

Green Living is Good for You—and the Planet

3min
page 39

Cariboo Regional District: Proposed Initiatives Emerge for Cariboo's Solid Waste Management Plan

5min
pages 36-37

Opinion: Michael Moses for Williams Lake City Council 2022

2min
page 35

Book Release: Talking to the Storykeepers

3min
pages 28-29

Road Dust Adds to Unhealthy Air Quality

3min
page 34

PurpleAir Monitors in Williams Lake Help Us See What We Breathe

3min
page 33

Disposition Options: You're Dead. Now What?

8min
pages 24-25

No Time Left to Waste: Microorganism Rancher

6min
pages 30-32

Get Messy, Feel Better

4min
pages 26-27

Conservation Conversation: Water Wise 2006-2021

5min
pages 22-23

Jar of Honey for Ukraine

8min
pages 8-10

Last Confession: Saying Goodbye with Gratitude

15min
pages 16-21

Caitlin Press Summer Reading List

2min
page 4

When to Say Goodbye: Pet Palliative Care

9min
pages 12-14

Recipe: Chocolate Avocado Cookies

0
page 15

Publisher’s Letter: Don't Look Up, Look Down… at the Dirt

5min
page 3

Keep the Green Flame Burning

7min
pages 5-7

Skywatch with Bill Irwin

2min
page 11
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