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I was out at 56 degrees north, 103 W at about 7:30 pm local time, which is
about 3 hours after sunset. Laid out on a beach at -10C (+5 F) with the waves tinkling the ice along the shore in the dark, with an ocassional groan as the pack shifted into the beach. In the 40 mins of watching, I saw 4 satellites tracking east to west and 2 going north to south. It'd be interesting to have a database of these, so you could tell what you were seeing. Maybe there's too much junk up there to sort out by time and earth observation point. I also saw 2 meteorites, one of which broke into 3 pieces. Very cool. The milky way was very bright. No artificial light for about 200 miles in any direction. Just us, the elk and the deer. SW reception was excellent. Took the travelling radio, the Sangean ATS 606A. Getting FM from 450 miles away. BBC 5975 and RN 6165 came through without the whip extended. Tons of Spanish stations. Lots of religious loonies plugging up the air. This was a spectacular reception situation. Listened mostly with the 23 ft roll-up. Had to temper the listening though, this was our anniversary trip after all. Nothing like a good radio, some fine port, a hot tub, some elk bugleing and the woman you love, in cabin in the woods, with no-one else anywhere nearby (better put the last of the list first!) |
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