Best Dark-Sky Destinations in the US
A genuinely dark sky is worth traveling for — the difference between a typical suburban view and a certified Dark Sky Park is closer to night and day than most people expect, revealing the Milky Way, faint nebulae, and far more stars than any backyard…
What Is a Star Party? A Beginner’s Guide to Attending
A star party is a gathering of amateur astronomers, ranging from a handful of local club members meeting in a field to multi-day events drawing thousands, all built around one shared idea: bringing telescopes together under a dark sky and sharing views with each other….
Dark-Sky Travel Packing List: What to Actually Bring
More dark-sky trips get cut short by being unprepared for cold, dead batteries, or dew-fogged optics than by actual bad weather. A little planning around these predictable problems makes the difference between a miserable early retreat and a full night of comfortable observing. Clothing: Colder…
The Bortle Scale Explained: Measuring Sky Darkness
The Bortle scale rates night sky darkness on a 9-point scale, from Class 1 (the darkest skies on Earth) to Class 9 (bright inner-city skies). Understanding it turns a vague sense of “my sky isn’t very dark” into a specific, comparable rating that predicts what’s…