Not only have there been lots of colorful lights in our night skies, there’s also been a comet. Or so I’m told. It’s not the kind of comet that shines brightly in the sky, it’s more reticent than that. Less showy.

Of course that makes it all the more alluring for night photographers, professional and armature alike. I went out on two successive nights to try to find the comet.

The first night neighbors and I met on a dirt road outside of town with an unrestricted view to the west. It should have been perfect. But though we stood out there, eyes turned toward the sky, scanning back and forth for over an hour we didn’t see it. We did however figure out we needed a heavier coat, hat and gloves if we were ever to do this again.

Oh, it was there all right — plenty of people posted images from that night. But we didn’t see it. Perhaps it wasn’t dark enough where we stood. Perhaps those clouds hanging low on the horizon obscured our view. Perhaps the nearly full moon rising behind us as the sun set was to blame.
Or maybe it was all of that combined. Regardless, we headed home empty handed. And very cold.

The next evening I met a fellow Milky Way student out at my favorite park, where we planned to show her daughter the birds that come down to eat out of people’s hands, and then head to a dark place along the lake to look for the comet.

Before we even headed out to look for the birds we got to see other flying things.

I rarely head out to feed the birds in late evening, but we tried. She did get a few birds to come down from their sleepy roosts to get a bedtime snack, but not many.

We didn’t see many birds that evening, but we did see other things flying.

Though at first we weren’t quite sure what it was.

Meanwhile, my friend’s daughter’s new best friend was a chipmunk who stuffed himself with seeds, ran off to deposit them some safe place for later and ran right back to get more seed multiple times. I think he has enough provisions to get him through the winter now.

As we were driving to our chosen comet viewing location we noticed the big orange moon was rising. I made a hard, quick right and we pulled in along a couple dozen other photographers, focused on the beautiful rising moon.

You’ll have to take my word for it. It was bright orange and rising up above the trees, reflecting in the lake. I didn’t have my camera set up for a moon shot, it wasn’t on a tripod. As I was messing with all of that the moment passed, as it does so often in photography.

As the sky turned red and then darkened we hurried to the spot we hoped would be perfect for comet viewing. A beach, deserted, gave us a perfect view of the night sky. But where was that comet?

We had come armed with instructions from other, successful, comet photographers — descriptions of where it was in the sky, how many degrees from this star or that formation. We tried it all, pointing our cameras in all sorts of directions, hoping.
And then my friend’s 22 year old daughter, bored with the old folks and their expensive equipment, raised her phone to the sky, shot one image and said…”It’s right there.”

And bingo. Knowing exactly where to shoot, even though we couldn’t see it, made all the difference. We couldn’t even see it in our images, unless we zoomed way in. So we might have gotten shots of it and not even known, would never have known, without the young women’s gift.

So there you have it. The comet who’s name I can’t pronounce or even spell. The elusive, sneaky, fading comet who will be back to visit in a mere 80,000 years. Or is it 800,000?

I’ll have those camera settings down by then. How about you?
October 22, 2024 at 9:16 am
All your shots are beautiful but I admit to laughing out loud at your friend’s daughter’s bored “it’s right there”!
Nicely done and well-earned!
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October 26, 2024 at 8:30 pm
I laughed too, but only AFTER I knew for sure I had a shot of it too! 🙂
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October 26, 2024 at 8:34 pm
Haha! Of course! 😉
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October 22, 2024 at 9:29 am
All the photos are so pretty – I don’t have the stamina anymore for taking celestial shots so thank you for sharing!
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October 26, 2024 at 8:30 pm
You are so welcome!
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October 22, 2024 at 9:41 am
Hi Dawn! Thank you for sharing! 😊
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October 26, 2024 at 8:30 pm
You are very welcome!
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October 22, 2024 at 10:50 am
These youngsters…they know everything! That is really something, though.
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October 26, 2024 at 8:31 pm
They sure do. I feel SOOOO old lately.
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October 22, 2024 at 11:00 am
Glad you finally “saw” it! After several nights of being out I got to the point were I could see it right off, naked eye and everything. On Thursday and Friday I showed the people around me (including a group of my friends on Friday) where to point their binoculars and phones to get it. Last night it was barely visible (this is outside of my house in the middle of a village), but still visible with binoculars. I didn’t even try photographs – for that it is long gone. For me, at least…
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October 26, 2024 at 8:31 pm
Wow. I never could see it with my eyes. But I didn’t go up north to get to darker skies either. I’m glad you saw it!
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October 26, 2024 at 9:07 pm
Doing astrophotography I have been getting good at seeing the little fuzzies… lol. Anyway, I saw it naked eye at least four different nights. By Monday it was too faint and by Thursday I had a very hard time locating it with the binoculars. I’m calling it gone – doubt if I’ll be around in 80,000 years to see that one again.
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October 22, 2024 at 11:20 am
Good for the young’un! Even when they’re bored, they can run circles around the rest of us, can’t they? I’m glad somebody finally spotted that elusive comet — it’s gorgeous. And just thinking that nobody alive will ever see it again makes you appreciate how vast the skies are … and how far away things are in the cosmos. By the way, I love the hot air balloon. I rode in one once, and I fell in love with the experience.
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October 26, 2024 at 8:32 pm
I know. Sometimes I catch myself thinking…I’ll try again next season…and then I remember for the comet there IS no next season that I’ll ever see. It’s a weird feeling.
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October 22, 2024 at 7:04 pm
Lovely shots, Dawn! Like me, you are drawn to the sky’s celestial offerings! Your sky shots are gorgeous. I had to chuckle at how your friend’s daughter found the comet like no big deal—which has inspired me for this week’s Sunday Stills post…
My daughter not only saw it from her area near the Pacific Ocean, she caught it with her phone and sent it to me. Sigh…
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October 26, 2024 at 8:33 pm
I swear. I tried with my phone but nada. I’m glad she got to see it!
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October 26, 2024 at 9:07 pm
😁
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October 23, 2024 at 12:01 am
How cool! All of it. But especially the comet. On the other hand, that sunset was gorgeous, and the autumn leaves on those trees that was really gorgeous! Loved the para-glider/hang-glider, that was fun. 🙂 Thank you.
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October 26, 2024 at 8:33 pm
It was all fun. Such a cool night, got to see so much!
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October 23, 2024 at 8:47 pm
Well in your quest for the comet which you finally got to see, you also saw a beautiful harvest moon, pretty foliage, a chippie and a paraglider too. In the FB group for Metroparks Photographers, one photographer often posts pics of a person paragliding at Kensington Park. They sometimes get pics of him/her right near the water.
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October 26, 2024 at 8:34 pm
I had never seen the paraglider before. But I’m usually there in early morning, and maybe he/she flies mostly in the evening.
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October 26, 2024 at 8:50 pm
I’ll have to see if people mention the time of day they see him/her. It wasn’t just in the Summer months either, as they’ve been layered up in the past. We had a paraglider at Council Point Park a few years back. He’d take off from there and I’d see him (bright green) while I was walking home flying over the neighborhood. Not as safe as the over the water I wouldn’t think.
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October 24, 2024 at 2:57 pm
Those are beautiful night sky shots, Dawn – It is amazing what we can see with our phones that we might not otherwise see!
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October 26, 2024 at 8:34 pm
I know! I just learned how to do basic night stuff with my phone. I’m sure there’s more I could get if I knew more.
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October 26, 2024 at 1:53 pm
You got the shot and a fun story to go along with it! Love it!
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October 26, 2024 at 8:35 pm
It was fun!
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November 3, 2024 at 12:54 pm
Even if it is 80 years, would anyone of us be able to see that comet again?
If only I leave a note for my grandchildren, if that was the case.
Lovely to stroll out with you 🙂
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November 3, 2024 at 4:17 pm
Hopefully the grandkids grandchildren will get to see something.
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