Last night on 14 Feb 07, the night sky was exceptionally clear and stable, so I set up my equipment at Dempsey for a Saturn observation session. Many people came up to view Saturn and all but two had never seen Saturn through a scope before, so they were very amazed at the sight. 99% of the people are young couples, I was the 1%

. In all, about 30 plus couples saw Saturn from 8.30pm to midnight. About 80% of the people ask if this was real, some thought it was a sticker or photograph. One guy told me to 'change the slide' while his girlfriend was viewing through the scope.
We were viewing Saturn at 345x using a 7mmXW (sharp high-contrast image seen with very slight light scattering but no diffraction spikes) on the Mewlon 210 on the Sphinx mount. Sky transparency was at 8/10, seeing was 7-8/10, scope collimation was at 98% on-axis. Saturn's South Polar region, South Equatorial Belt (plus others), Rings A,B,C, Cassini Division, Encke Minima, and 5 moons were distinct and clearly observed. Attempted but not seen were the Equatorial Band, Ring B 'spokes' Encke Division, and Keeler's Gap.