Observing near Hurricane
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area? Bob
Yes, There is a site that OAS uses in February that is just off Highway 9 to the west of Virgin. The road is about 1 mile east of the La Verkin Overlook road. The dirt road has a stop sign and is right where some power lines cross Highway 9. There is a little turnaround spot to the left as you drive on the dirt road before you head down to a dam. We observed from the turnaround area. Debbie may have some other sites that they could do this time of year. Dave -----Original Message----- From: utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com] On Behalf Of Robert Taylor Photo Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 11:26 AM To: Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com Subject: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area? Bob _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Visit the Photo Gallery: http://www.slas.us/gallery2/main.php
Thanks for that suggestion. Bob -----Original Message----- From: utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com] On Behalf Of Dunn, David Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 12:49 PM To: Utah Astronomy Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane Yes, There is a site that OAS uses in February that is just off Highway 9 to the west of Virgin. The road is about 1 mile east of the La Verkin Overlook road. The dirt road has a stop sign and is right where some power lines cross Highway 9. There is a little turnaround spot to the left as you drive on the dirt road before you head down to a dam. We observed from the turnaround area. Debbie may have some other sites that they could do this time of year. Dave -----Original Message----- From: utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:utah-astronomy-bounces@mailman.xmission.com] On Behalf Of Robert Taylor Photo Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 11:26 AM To: Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com Subject: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area? Bob _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Visit the Photo Gallery: http://www.slas.us/gallery2/main.php _______________________________________________ Utah-Astronomy mailing list Utah-Astronomy@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/utah-astronomy Visit the Photo Gallery: http://www.slas.us/gallery2/main.php
I always thought a good place to observe would be out in Warner Valley, south of Hurricane. Turn on 700 West and head south past the airport. Go around the airport and keep heading south. There will be signs that say Warner Valley, eventually. Once you get a little ways into the valley the hills of Sand Hollow hide a lot of the glare from Hurricane and hills to the west hide much of the glare from St. George. It’s a wide-open valley, lots of sky. Past the airport the road turns to gravel, but it’s one of the those “highway” gravel roads. You need to watch for a few dips, but I have been out in the area several times and routinely drive 40-50mph on the road. Don’t try to make it into the valley from the St. George side. There some big sand dunes you have to negotiate and most cars won’t make it through. Another thing, not that many people would go out there at night, so car lights should not be a problem. Almost all cars would be from the Hurricane side, not the St. George side. They can’t get through the dunes. Dave On [Aug 5], at [Aug 5] 11:25 AM, Robert Taylor Photo wrote:
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area?
Bob
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Hi, Kolob Canyons is good although there is some light pollution from Cedar City. In the summer, I go up near Lava Point where my buddy has an acre property lot just north of the Lava Point turnoff. Anywhere around Kolob Reservoir or near the cemetery up there would be good. Darker and higher than Kolob Canyons but more mosquitoes. I always stay overnight when I go up to Kolob Reservoir because there are many deer around the area. Plus, it takes me an hour and a half to get home. There is also a good site in the Anasazi Plateau subdivision. I haven't been up there this year but there was an empty cul-de-sac called Navaho Circle. I just got back from Enterprise Reservoir yesterday after a fun day of fishing. That place has some real possibilities. Camping is only $9 per night and it is higher and darker than Mountain Meadows. I used to go to Mountain Meadows about 10 years ago so I don't know how good it is anymore. I may go up to Enterprise Reservoir in September and stay the night to see how dark it is up there. We took highway 18 to get to Enterprise Reservoir. When it gets a little cooler I want to go out to Gunlock Reservoir. It is a state park so I will wait till the off-season so it will be less crowded. It's only at 3600ft so it is probably a little warm right now. A friend of mine saw the Zodiacal Lights back in early April. Also, Navaho Lake may be good but I've never set up there The other sites, Virgin, Warner Valley, and Az strip are winter, late fall, and early spring sites. It's too hot for me right now so I go north into the mountains. Hope this helps. Clear Skies, Debbie On Fri, Aug 5, 2011 at 3:41 PM, Dave Gary <davegary@me.com> wrote:
I always thought a good place to observe would be out in Warner Valley, south of Hurricane. Turn on 700 West and head south past the airport. Go around the airport and keep heading south. There will be signs that say Warner Valley, eventually. Once you get a little ways into the valley the hills of Sand Hollow hide a lot of the glare from Hurricane and hills to the west hide much of the glare from St. George. It’s a wide-open valley, lots of sky. Past the airport the road turns to gravel, but it’s one of the those “highway” gravel roads. You need to watch for a few dips, but I have been out in the area several times and routinely drive 40-50mph on the road. Don’t try to make it into the valley from the St. George side. There some big sand dunes you have to negotiate and most cars won’t make it through. Another thing, not that many people would go out there at night, so car lights should not be a problem. Almost all cars would be from the Hurricane side, not the St. George side. They can’t get through the dunes.
Dave
On [Aug 5], at [Aug 5] 11:25 AM, Robert Taylor Photo wrote:
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the
Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area?
Bob
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Hey Debbie, What about that spot near the old landing strip? Is it still usable? Thanks, Joe ________________________________ From: Debbie <astrodeb@beyondbb.com> To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Friday, August 5, 2011 6:56 PM Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane Hi, Kolob Canyons is good although there is some light pollution from Cedar City. In the summer, I go up near Lava Point where my buddy has an acre property lot just north of the Lava Point turnoff. Anywhere around Kolob Reservoir or near the cemetery up there would be good. Darker and higher than Kolob Canyons but more mosquitoes. I always stay overnight when I go up to Kolob Reservoir because there are many deer around the area. Plus, it takes me an hour and a half to get home. There is also a good site in the Anasazi Plateau subdivision. I haven't been up there this year but there was an empty cul-de-sac called Navaho Circle. I just got back from Enterprise Reservoir yesterday after a fun day of fishing. That place has some real possibilities. Camping is only $9 per night and it is higher and darker than Mountain Meadows. I used to go to Mountain Meadows about 10 years ago so I don't know how good it is anymore. I may go up to Enterprise Reservoir in September and stay the night to see how dark it is up there. We took highway 18 to get to Enterprise Reservoir. When it gets a little cooler I want to go out to Gunlock Reservoir. It is a state park so I will wait till the off-season so it will be less crowded. It's only at 3600ft so it is probably a little warm right now. A friend of mine saw the Zodiacal Lights back in early April. Also, Navaho Lake may be good but I've never set up there The other sites, Virgin, Warner Valley, and Az strip are winter, late fall, and early spring sites. It's too hot for me right now so I go north into the mountains. Hope this helps. Clear Skies, Debbie On Fri, Aug 5, 2011 at 3:41 PM, Dave Gary <davegary@me.com> wrote:
I always thought a good place to observe would be out in Warner Valley, south of Hurricane. Turn on 700 West and head south past the airport. Go around the airport and keep heading south. There will be signs that say Warner Valley, eventually. Once you get a little ways into the valley the hills of Sand Hollow hide a lot of the glare from Hurricane and hills to the west hide much of the glare from St. George. It’s a wide-open valley, lots of sky. Past the airport the road turns to gravel, but it’s one of the those “highway” gravel roads. You need to watch for a few dips, but I have been out in the area several times and routinely drive 40-50mph on the road. Don’t try to make it into the valley from the St. George side. There some big sand dunes you have to negotiate and most cars won’t make it through. Another thing, not that many people would go out there at night, so car lights should not be a problem. Almost all cars would be from the Hurricane side, not the St. George side. They can’t get through the dunes.
Dave
On [Aug 5], at [Aug 5] 11:25 AM, Robert Taylor Photo wrote:
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the
Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area?
Bob
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I don't know about that site. I found a better site at the Little Black Mountain petroglyths just off of the Southern Utah Parkway. I think it is better and darker than the old airport site. Last May,I saw Omega Centauri. Debbie On Sat, Aug 6, 2011 at 4:59 PM, Joe Bauman <josephmbauman@yahoo.com> wrote:
Hey Debbie, What about that spot near the old landing strip? Is it still usable? Thanks, Joe
________________________________ From: Debbie <astrodeb@beyondbb.com> To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Friday, August 5, 2011 6:56 PM Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane
Hi,
Kolob Canyons is good although there is some light pollution from Cedar City. In the summer, I go up near Lava Point where my buddy has an acre property lot just north of the Lava Point turnoff. Anywhere around Kolob Reservoir or near the cemetery up there would be good. Darker and higher than Kolob Canyons but more mosquitoes. I always stay overnight when I go up to Kolob Reservoir because there are many deer around the area. Plus, it takes me an hour and a half to get home.
There is also a good site in the Anasazi Plateau subdivision. I haven't been up there this year but there was an empty cul-de-sac called Navaho Circle. I just got back from Enterprise Reservoir yesterday after a fun day of fishing. That place has some real possibilities. Camping is only $9 per night and it is higher and darker than Mountain Meadows. I used to go to Mountain Meadows about 10 years ago so I don't know how good it is anymore. I may go up to Enterprise Reservoir in September and stay the night to see how dark it is up there. We took highway 18 to get to Enterprise Reservoir.
When it gets a little cooler I want to go out to Gunlock Reservoir. It is a state park so I will wait till the off-season so it will be less crowded. It's only at 3600ft so it is probably a little warm right now. A friend of mine saw the Zodiacal Lights back in early April. Also, Navaho Lake may be good but I've never set up there
The other sites, Virgin, Warner Valley, and Az strip are winter, late fall, and early spring sites. It's too hot for me right now so I go north into the mountains. Hope this helps.
Clear Skies,
Debbie
On Fri, Aug 5, 2011 at 3:41 PM, Dave Gary <davegary@me.com> wrote:
I always thought a good place to observe would be out in Warner Valley, south of Hurricane. Turn on 700 West and head south past the airport. Go around the airport and keep heading south. There will be signs that say Warner Valley, eventually. Once you get a little ways into the valley the hills of Sand Hollow hide a lot of the glare from Hurricane and hills to the west hide much of the glare from St. George. It’s a wide-open valley, lots of sky. Past the airport the road turns to gravel, but it’s one of the those “highway” gravel roads. You need to watch for a few dips, but I have been out in the area several times and routinely drive 40-50mph on the road. Don’t try to make it into the valley from the St. George side. There some big sand dunes you have to negotiate and most cars won’t make it through. Another thing, not that many people would go out there at night, so car lights should not be a problem. Almost all cars would be from the Hurricane side, not the St. George side. They can’t get through the dunes.
Dave
On [Aug 5], at [Aug 5] 11:25 AM, Robert Taylor Photo wrote:
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the
Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area?
Bob
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I'd love to see that. Thanks, Debbie. -- Joe ________________________________ From: Debbie <astrodeb@beyondbb.com> To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Saturday, August 6, 2011 6:22 PM Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane I don't know about that site. I found a better site at the Little Black Mountain petroglyths just off of the Southern Utah Parkway. I think it is better and darker than the old airport site. Last May,I saw Omega Centauri. Debbie On Sat, Aug 6, 2011 at 4:59 PM, Joe Bauman <josephmbauman@yahoo.com> wrote:
Hey Debbie, What about that spot near the old landing strip? Is it still usable? Thanks, Joe
________________________________ From: Debbie <astrodeb@beyondbb.com> To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Friday, August 5, 2011 6:56 PM Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane
Hi,
Kolob Canyons is good although there is some light pollution from Cedar City. In the summer, I go up near Lava Point where my buddy has an acre property lot just north of the Lava Point turnoff. Anywhere around Kolob Reservoir or near the cemetery up there would be good. Darker and higher than Kolob Canyons but more mosquitoes. I always stay overnight when I go up to Kolob Reservoir because there are many deer around the area. Plus, it takes me an hour and a half to get home.
There is also a good site in the Anasazi Plateau subdivision. I haven't been up there this year but there was an empty cul-de-sac called Navaho Circle. I just got back from Enterprise Reservoir yesterday after a fun day of fishing. That place has some real possibilities. Camping is only $9 per night and it is higher and darker than Mountain Meadows. I used to go to Mountain Meadows about 10 years ago so I don't know how good it is anymore. I may go up to Enterprise Reservoir in September and stay the night to see how dark it is up there. We took highway 18 to get to Enterprise Reservoir.
When it gets a little cooler I want to go out to Gunlock Reservoir. It is a state park so I will wait till the off-season so it will be less crowded. It's only at 3600ft so it is probably a little warm right now. A friend of mine saw the Zodiacal Lights back in early April. Also, Navaho Lake may be good but I've never set up there
The other sites, Virgin, Warner Valley, and Az strip are winter, late fall, and early spring sites. It's too hot for me right now so I go north into the mountains. Hope this helps.
Clear Skies,
Debbie
On Fri, Aug 5, 2011 at 3:41 PM, Dave Gary <davegary@me.com> wrote:
I always thought a good place to observe would be out in Warner Valley, south of Hurricane. Turn on 700 West and head south past the airport. Go around the airport and keep heading south. There will be signs that say Warner Valley, eventually. Once you get a little ways into the valley the hills of Sand Hollow hide a lot of the glare from Hurricane and hills to the west hide much of the glare from St. George. It’s a wide-open valley, lots of sky. Past the airport the road turns to gravel, but it’s one of the those “highway” gravel roads. You need to watch for a few dips, but I have been out in the area several times and routinely drive 40-50mph on the road. Don’t try to make it into the valley from the St. George side. There some big sand dunes you have to negotiate and most cars won’t make it through. Another thing, not that many people would go out there at night, so car lights should not be a problem. Almost all cars would be from the Hurricane side, not the St. George side. They can’t get through the dunes.
Dave
On [Aug 5], at [Aug 5] 11:25 AM, Robert Taylor Photo wrote:
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the
Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area?
Bob
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Warner valley is good the only issue is that we have had a lot of 4x4, hunter and camping traffic out in warner. We used it until 2 years ago ----- Original Message ----- From: Dave Gary [mailto:davegary@me.com] Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 03:41 PM To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane I always thought a good place to observe would be out in Warner Valley, south of Hurricane. Turn on 700 West and head south past the airport. Go around the airport and keep heading south. There will be signs that say Warner Valley, eventually. Once you get a little ways into the valley the hills of Sand Hollow hide a lot of the glare from Hurricane and hills to the west hide much of the glare from St. George. It’s a wide-open valley, lots of sky. Past the airport the road turns to gravel, but it’s one of the those “highway” gravel roads. You need to watch for a few dips, but I have been out in the area several times and routinely drive 40-50mph on the road. Don’t try to make it into the valley from the St. George side. There some big sand dunes you have to negotiate and most cars won’t make it through. Another thing, not that many people would go out there at night, so car lights should not be a problem. Almost all cars would be from the Hurricane side, not the St. George side. They can’t get through the dunes. Dave On [Aug 5], at [Aug 5] 11:25 AM, Robert Taylor Photo wrote:
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area?
Bob
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Toroweap would be awesome. ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Dunn" <David.Dunn@supervalu.com> To: utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com Sent: Friday, August 5, 2011 7:06:37 PM Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane Warner valley is good the only issue is that we have had a lot of 4x4, hunter and camping traffic out in warner. We used it until 2 years ago ----- Original Message ----- From: Dave Gary [mailto:davegary@me.com] Sent: Friday, August 05, 2011 03:41 PM To: Utah Astronomy <utah-astronomy@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Utah-astronomy] Observing near Hurricane I always thought a good place to observe would be out in Warner Valley, south of Hurricane. Turn on 700 West and head south past the airport. Go around the airport and keep heading south. There will be signs that say Warner Valley, eventually. Once you get a little ways into the valley the hills of Sand Hollow hide a lot of the glare from Hurricane and hills to the west hide much of the glare from St. George. It’s a wide-open valley, lots of sky. Past the airport the road turns to gravel, but it’s one of the those “highway” gravel roads. You need to watch for a few dips, but I have been out in the area several times and routinely drive 40-50mph on the road. Don’t try to make it into the valley from the St. George side. There some big sand dunes you have to negotiate and most cars won’t make it through. Another thing, not that many people would go out there at night, so car lights should not be a problem. Almost all cars would be from the Hurricane side, not the St. George side. They can’t get through the dunes. Dave On [Aug 5], at [Aug 5] 11:25 AM, Robert Taylor Photo wrote:
I have a request from an astronomer coming in from L.A and he'll be in the Hurricane area. Anyone know of a good observing site in that area?
Bob
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participants (7)
-
Dave Gary -
Debbie -
Dunn, David -
gazebo4sale@comcast.net -
Joe Bauman -
Robert Taylor -
Robert Taylor Photo