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thank you bro ! adding all of these to my list,,, Curious though, how's ur experience been as a stargazer in general, do you travel specifically for dark sky spots ??
I don't actually do trips for astro. I take advantage of darker skies where and when I can, as weather and the moon can spoil a night. But when travel takes me somewhere with darker skies, I go out of my way to see them if conditions permit.
No idea how to assess my experience as a stargazer. I like it. I keep doing it. Few things are as surreal as seeing the milky way band stretch from horizon to horizon. It feels tangible. The sky feels like a solid dome when the skies are clear. Nothing is moving, there's no frame of reference, and your eyes have no depth perception as they're focused and parallaxed to infinity. The uncertainty about whether that's a tiny cloud or a distant nebula fades as it just stays there, unmoving, unchanging, with an astronomical conclusion sinking in: that cloud is shifting faster than any human-made object, is larger than the sphere of human influence, is far older than the human species, and is further than we can ever travel by a factor of 10,000. And then it's possible to find the Andromeda galaxy by eye. A distinct, fuzzy ghost hanging in the sky, always at exactly the same reference to nearby stars.
Lightpollutionmap.info is the site I use to evaluate light pollution and travel options. I'll travel over an hour at night to get to "blue" skies (bortle class 2) from a hotel home base. It's hard to go further, as this is all at night when I should be sleeping. I usually spend 2 hours at the destination with good conditions.
Cleardarksky.com has been what I use for sky conditions. Your regular weather forecast icon tells you about thick clouds and the details give you predicted wind and humidity. This site gives block ratings by the hour to predict when the regular clouds, the hanging vapor, the humidity, the wind, and a bit of inference about convective heat flows will allow good "seeing". The smoke map is broken, unfortunately. If you've seen bright stars, particularly Sirius in the winter, twinkling, flickering, changing color, or even blinking out for a moment, that's part of what would be bad seeing. It doesn't mean I'll pass on the trip, but it can be the difference between the Andromeda Galaxy being naked eye or not.
I use a phone app Sky Safari. It's been the best UI and representation I've tested across a few apps. Good indication of sunlight as well, with full darkness being an hour or two after sunset depending on season/latitude. It's a good way to find objects.
I bring a camera to try to frame nightscapes. I bring 10x50 binoculars as they are relatively cheap (for astro), lightweight (enough), have minimals setup, and are bright. They don't have the zoom of a telescope, but they make up for it in ease of use and two-eye viewing.
Is that indicative of my experience with stargazing? I clearly love it