Mystiq, Thiha, Avarielle - Great! Please try and let us know how's the results. Bukit Brown, which I believe, should be a good dark spot to do imaging. Worth exploring. Don't worry too much, I think living beings are more scary than the rested ones.
zymon - Thanks for sharing your experience! I can relate to your excitement, especially when I see the milky way pop up in my photos. Agreed that Wednesday night was good. If you can see the sagittarius clouds clearly, this means the milky way can be photographed! And I did just that on Wednesday by sacrificing few hours of sleep....
Since I started out with the images of milky way in May and June, I guess I should follow up with the July ones. If time & weather permit, I may continue to post milky way photos shot in Singapore every month.
Photos below are taken after midnight (i.e. early hours of 11 July 2013) at Bidadari returning once again after being forced home by the clouds in the earlier shoot. To be honest, I think I may have self-poisoned myself with these photos....
This 1st photo is stacked using 50 photos x 13 sec each.
Further details of this photo is available on flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/58196275@N04/9261629829/
This 2nd photo is my first proper try using Pentax o-gps1 with astrotracer function. My camera was pointed nearly towards zenith and I wasn't sure how the final photo will turn out to be...cos not sure whether the astrotracer will work properly in a near vertical orientation. The shoot was interrupted again by incoming clouds on the 6th exposure.
With 5 photos x 1 min each, this is the stacked result:
Further details of this photo available on flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/58196275@N04/9261632933/
With astrotracer, it seems to give a better result. But it does not mean that you need one in order to shoot the milky way. Even without astrotracer and with "short" exposure & stacking more photos, it seems to be able to give simiilar results.
George