Last night was nice and clear, although very windy. My garden is sheltered with houses and trees pretty much surrounding it; this means it's nice and sheltered from the wind, but it generally means I only have a good view of the sky north and above (my latitude is approximately 51.8 degrees according to
http://itouchmap.com/latlong.html ). To observe the planets and the moon will mean travelling to a more open area which makes receiving the longer telescope instead of the one I ordered more annoying.
My aim for the hour or so I was out was to learn how to roughly align the mount ("Polar alignment") with Polaris and just get the hang of moving my Sky-Watcher Explorer 130 around to look at stuff. When I get my head around my mount I'll try and make an equatorial mount for dummies guide because all the guides I have seen assume some prior knowledge, of which I have none. I am pleased to say I managed to swap eyepieces easily and move the mount around on its two axes in the dark. I practiced tracking some stars using the fine adjustment knobs and it wasn't as difficult as some have made it out to be. I managed to track my target easily using all my eyepieces, although forgot to try my Barlow lens, which probably would have made it more difficult.
I had a few issues that I need to resolve (excuse the astronomy pun):
1)
Identifying Stuff I could only see a few stars with the naked eye in any one part of the sky, but of course the point of a telescope is to show much more than you can see. For a total beginner like me this made it extremely difficult to work out whether I was looking at the star I thought I was. Even using the lens with the least magnification I had no idea what I was looking at and couldn't find stars I expected them to be near. I think I need to spend more time just looking at the sky and understanding the constellations a bit more. I also need to understand how much of space I can see through my telescope to give me an idea of how far I need to move it to star-hop to what I want to view. I also had a lot of problem using the red-spot scope. I'm not sure it was adequately aligned and there seems to be a bit of a knack to using it which I certainly don't have yet!
2)
Tracking Although I had no problems tracking my target (not that I knew what that target was), it didn't stay in the middle of my view. With an equatorial mount I should be able to track a target just using the RA knob but I tried this a couple of times and I had to use both adjustment knobs to keep it centered. I guess this means I failed at setting the mount up correctly or I didn't align it properly. It wasn't horrendous and I managed alright so that's one positive outcome.
3)
Viewing Looking through each lens isn't as easy as I thought it was going to be. The advice I read was to keep both eyes open but this makes it very hard to see for a beginner I think. Also to see the full circle of view available I found I had to hold my eye different ways for each lens. I naively thought it would be like binoculars where you just whack them up to your eyes and look through them - silly me!
Next time it's clear I will try and actually aim to find something and hopefully with a bit of experience some of these issues will disappear.