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I love seeing meteor showers, the recent ISS and thought it'd be nice to show hora jnr astronomy, see if its his thing/or just to broaden his horizons (!) really.
Recommendations- easy to use yet powerful. I'd love a proper big one but I don't have an acre of land spare and my evil lair is 100% underground.
[url= http://www.virtualtelescope.eu/buy-telescope-time/ ]This[/url] would be worth a shot?
Lemonysam- out of the first two links - what is the power difference (i.e would you really be able to tell the difference for a newbie?
Lemonysam- out of the first two links - what is the power difference (i.e would you really be able to tell the difference for a newbie?
Power's the wrong way of looking at it really - it's more about getting contrast on fainter objects. To be honest for the kind of stuff you'd likely be looking at (the moon, the big open clusters, M42, doubles, jupiter's moons/saturns rings) it would be good enough and easy for a kid to handle plus the fact it's so small means you can take it camping and dark skies will make more difference than a bigger scope.
Also, binoculars are probably a better bet but personally I don't get on with them
it would be good enough and easy for a kid to handle plus the fact it's so small means you can take it camping
Hes 5 and that ^ would mean its perfect for camping this Spring/Summer. Thanks 😀
Not a bad idea- more portable although alittle pervyAlso, binoculars are probably a better bet but personally I don't get on with them
Mini dobson as already suggested or a small refractor as a beginner scope. Bino's are also a good shout but especially for a wee feller, it's really hard to keep things still in view.
Dark skies, google sky map and good gloves in winter!
Check out this forum for help: http://stargazerslounge.com/forum/19-getting-started-general-help-and-advice/



