S00j win, astronomy fail
Sep. 23rd, 2010 02:03 amI went over to Indy today for
s00j's concert. Getting there was a bit of a pain. First there was a bill I remembered I really needed to get in the mail, so I was a little late leaving. Then, just before the Crawfordsville exit, traffic came to a complete stop and everyone who could was bailing out at the exit. I decided to do so also and go through Crawfordsville rather than sit, but it ended up costing me another 15 or 20 minutes. Then coming into Indy there was a really bogus work zone, (I'm a bit worried that I may have gotten a photo ticket), and then I had to get through construction on 38th street which can only be described with an 11 letter word that starts with C, ends with K, and might upset a few readers. Thus my plan of being half an hour early turned into being a few minutes late, so I missed most of the intro, but I didn't miss any songs. And I certainly wouldn't have wanted to miss any. I didn't get the new album because they didn't have any, but by way of apology, we got to hear several songs even newer than the album. I can get the album at OVFF.
When I got home (which involved less stress than getting there), I decided to take a night walk and admire the full moon and Jupiter. It was just past local midnight, and when I was half a mile away from my house, it was all clear and I got the crazy notion to try to use my honkin' big telephoto lens as a telescope and find Jupiter's moons. Unfortunately, by the time I got back to my house, clouds had rolled in. There were a few breaks, but not many. It was very pretty, but I didn't have the ambition to switch to a less extreme lens and figure out a good exposure. I could easily see Jupiter as a disc and I think I saw one of the moons, but there was never enough of a gap in the clouds to set up a long exposure. Maybe I'll be inspired to try it again and it will actually be clear.
When I got home (which involved less stress than getting there), I decided to take a night walk and admire the full moon and Jupiter. It was just past local midnight, and when I was half a mile away from my house, it was all clear and I got the crazy notion to try to use my honkin' big telephoto lens as a telescope and find Jupiter's moons. Unfortunately, by the time I got back to my house, clouds had rolled in. There were a few breaks, but not many. It was very pretty, but I didn't have the ambition to switch to a less extreme lens and figure out a good exposure. I could easily see Jupiter as a disc and I think I saw one of the moons, but there was never enough of a gap in the clouds to set up a long exposure. Maybe I'll be inspired to try it again and it will actually be clear.