Geoffrey S.
Yelp
I visited this observatory 3 years ago and have been meaning to go back for a while now. The first time I saw a fault line on the moon through the big telescope, and the galaxy Andromeda through the west telescope. The East one was down that night.
The observatory is open to the public every Saturday night. Just the location alone yields a lot of stars seen with the naked eye. I wish they would expand to Friday nights as well, it would help with the long lines on clear evenings. Hope HMNS considers that. I love this place, but experiences may vary. The Stars have to align, quite literally, for the best experience. Hitting a perfectly clear Saturday night with no other plans made can be a tough feat. Hence why it took me 3 years to make it back. Not to mention last night (Jan 23), there was a full moon and it made viewing anything else very difficult.
Upon arrival, (7:45pm) and a $7 per person fee to enter the park. We caught a 15 minute presentation talking about the observatory, telescopes, a well as some interesting size comparisons and info about the planets Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune, their moons, as well as touching on other galaxies and star systems. With the long lines they recommended to go up and look through the smaller volunteer's telescopes. Most were pointed at the moon and a few different star systems. We decided to brave the lines and cold and paid an additional $7 each for the telescope tickets. The west telescope yielded a cluster of stars in the Perseus constellation, more than you can see with the naked eye. However it was less interesting than seeing Andromeda the first time, but the moon's light was going to prevent that. Seeing the main telescopes lines we went to the East telescope. The line seemed to freeze (so did we from the cold), as they repositioned the telescope. But nothing happened. Whoever was in there either never came out, or there was a technical difficulty. We gave up and checked out the now shorter line for the big telescope. After learning it was only pointed to another star cluster, and the observatory about to close in 30 minutes, we called it a night.
Doesn't sound like the greatest experience, so why 5 stars? Again, a lot of things have to go right. Jupiter was still below the horizon and the planetary alignment of mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn is viewable within a two week period only before dawn. Despite the bright moon, cold weather and long lines, I was with good company, and am thankful to have a facility like this only 45 minutes away. I look forward to going back on another clear Saturday night, during a new moon, with warmer conditions and hopefully see more amazing views of our universe.