Beautiful

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
The top one is indeed a Katydid and the bottom may well be a locust (IDK) but this is a Cicada.
View attachment 4251751
Growing up we called them Locust & man are they loud!
We called them 17 year locusts. But they must rotate as they were around every year.

But they're actually called periodical cicadas as they read magazines and newpapers.

 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
Heard a thump on the living room window & I knew what it was so after looking around a bit I found him addled sitting in the grass. Brought it inside cause it's cold & we always have Crows, Ravens & Eagles around.

View attachment 4251852

He perked up and was alert in 30 minutes so I put him in the tree off the front porch.

View attachment 4251857

Flew off after just a few.
Nice save
 

ANC

Well-Known Member
Yayyyy, happy winter solstice.

The days just get longer from here!!

View attachment 4252818
Our village is over 300 years old... It was pretty cool coming from evening shopping.
The main roads are laid out E to W and N to S. It was soo cool, the sun was at one end of the main road and the full moon on the other.
The oldtimers must have been big into this shit.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Beautiful and exacting craftsmanship. Naval binoculars c. WW2, primarily Japanese (2nd one is German I think). Their optics were IJN's great advantage in early WW2 engagements prior to Allies development and use of radar.







I love Japanese optics. I have two pairs of Japanese binoculars. One is my do-it-all pair of Fujinon 10x70s. The other is this 22x100 Miyauchi astro (semi-apo objectives) pair, which looks like a direct descendant of those lovely naval glasses you posted.
The skies are brighter and my eyes worse than just 5 years ago, so for now my days of chasing 12th-magnitude objects are on hiatus.

 
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curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
I love Japanese optics. I have two pairs of Japanese binoculars. One is my do-it-all pair of Fujinon 10x70s. The other is this 22x100 Miyauchi astro (semi-apo objectives) pair, which looks like a direct descendant of those lovely naval glasses you posted.
The skies are brighter and my eyes worse than just 5 years ago, so for now my days of chasing 12th-magnitude objects are on hiatus.

Yours?
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
I love Japanese optics. I have two pairs of Japanese binoculars. One is my do-it-all pair of Fujinon 10x70s. The other is this 22x100 Miyauchi astro (semi-apo objectives) pair, which looks like a direct descendant of those lovely naval glasses you posted.
The skies are brighter and my eyes worse than just 5 years ago, so for now my days of chasing 12th-magnitude objects are on hiatus.

Those look like they'd be the Schnidt for evaluating sheep horns @ long distance, but am I carrying them up a mountain?
Nope, no thank you sir.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I saw Comet 46P/Wirtanen last night again. It is past perigee and perihelion, and it is slowly climbing into the northern sky above Auriga.
I caught it in the 10x70s as a big soft kiss of very faint light. In the 20x90s it was full moon big but faint and very diffuse. No visible nucleus.
This is technicaly a bright comet, but it has very low surface brightness. The fairly low light pollution I have here is still enough to make it a tough target. I'll bet that under desert skies it could be a naked-eye object, sort of like the Pinwheel M33. I've seen that one without optical aid (averted vision) as recently as 8 years ago.

The comet.

 
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