Sure did! But had to make a mad dash 20km south as the clouds at home decided to hang around. Was naked eye visible as well as a good portion of the tail. Fantasic in binos. Used my 24mm lens for wide angle pics.
@@gary122 I was on the Central Coast, it was barely visible to the naked eye but my friend and I managed to get some decent photos with our phones (I forgot to bring my binoculars).
Thank you it’s been great viewing here in New England, definitely will try to get Sunday. I have some good captures with a bit of light pollution so with real dark sky’s should be a bonus. Have a great day thanks for sharing this.
Glad you’ve managed to see it in the States. I’ve been going out for the past 11 nights here in the UK and haven’t seen it once, not once, due to cloud cover! I’ve now given up! Complete waste of time!
@@astroventure2221 Yes. If you want to take up Astronomy, don’t live here. It’s constant disappointment! No wonder I’ve never taken it up. You can wait weeks and weeks to see something and then have it ruined by the weather! It’s an absolute certainty! Enjoy it over there anyway. Thanks for the upload. Without these clips, I would never see it, so thanks a lot!
@@peterclarke3990 @peterclarke3990 I lived in Europe for 10 years. UK - What is this thing called Sun? Germany - What was that yellow thing we saw for a moment? Italy - How do you not know what the Sun is? Look at our tan.
I agree, the pictures were great, the explanation of a long exposure time was needed, because people are expecting to see it due to the pictures on the internet. But the setting are necessary due to this being a once in a lifetime comet. Thank you
Nice pics! Looking good for tonight! Down under. If the clouds stay away!
Did you get it? (I did)
Sure did! But had to make a mad dash 20km south as the clouds at home decided to hang around. Was naked eye visible as well as a good portion of the tail. Fantasic in binos. Used my 24mm lens for wide angle pics.
@@gary122 I was on the Central Coast, it was barely visible to the naked eye but my friend and I managed to get some decent photos with our phones (I forgot to bring my binoculars).
Thank you it’s been great viewing here in New England, definitely will try to get Sunday. I have some good captures with a bit of light pollution so with real dark sky’s should be a bonus. Have a great day thanks for sharing this.
Glad you’ve managed to see it in the States. I’ve been going out for the past 11 nights here in the UK and haven’t seen it once, not once, due to cloud cover! I’ve now given up! Complete waste of time!
@@peterclarke3990 you do have it brutal in the UK with the cloud cover.
@@astroventure2221 Yes. If you want to take up Astronomy, don’t live here. It’s constant disappointment! No wonder I’ve never taken it up. You can wait weeks and weeks to see something and then have it ruined by the weather! It’s an absolute certainty! Enjoy it over there anyway. Thanks for the upload. Without these clips, I would never see it, so thanks a lot!
@@peterclarke3990 @peterclarke3990 I lived in Europe for 10 years. UK - What is this thing called Sun? Germany - What was that yellow thing we saw for a moment? Italy - How do you not know what the Sun is? Look at our tan.
Beautiful shot!
What lens and focal length did you use?
@jesuschrist2284 I was at 100mm on the long end and 35mm on the short.
@@astroventure2221 ty so much
I agree, the pictures were great, the explanation of a long exposure time was needed, because people are expecting to see it due to the pictures on the internet. But the setting are necessary due to this being a once in a lifetime comet. Thank you