Day 1:
Once it was time for dinner, dark clouds started brewing and a heavy rain fell upon us. The skies opened up and it rained till around 9pm. Fortunately after the rain it started to clear. I was overawed by the views of M51 (Whirlpool galaxy), Helix Nebula (NGC 7293) (so 3D-like!) , M17 (now I can see why its called a swan), and 47 Tucanae globular cluster through Gavin’s Obsession ™ 12.5” dob. The GC was so finely resolved that the stars from the outer rim of the globular formed a gradient that increases as you look towards the core. Whenever anyone who was in the queue looked into in this scope at faint objects for the first time, a ‘Wow” was uttered. No averted vision needed, just direct vision!
Skies remained clear up till around 4am , personal meteor count : 6
Day 2:
When heading for lunch, spotted a sun halo amongst the high clouds. A brief drizzle took place and we were treated to a sight of 2 rainbows at separate times. One of the rainbow was so low that it actually seem to have sprung out of the sea. Around 3pm, the Solarscope 70mm Etalon was deployed to give us an awesome view of the sun via a Takahashi refractor + Flea3 webcam. There was a loop-shaped prominence on the Sun’s rim at the 12 o’clock position and a long scar-like faculae running on the disk of the sun near the 8oclock area.
The night started off strong and it remained clear till about 2am. Had a look at the moon through a binoviewer on Koko’s scope, awesome! Spent the rest of the night hunting down DSOs, kept looking at M4 and Antares in my scope in the same FOV with a 28mm eyepiece, getting lost in the star fields of Scorpius and Cygnus, the Perseus double cluster (NGC 869 + NGC 884) were some of the memorable sights. Also looked at M5 for the first time, a GC with uneven brightness and M30 another first for me. Talked about prata as the Milky Way and HDB flats analogy to 2 of Gavin’s friends who dropped by for awhile. Both of them witnessed a meteor streak as she requested for me to point my scope towards Antares, if I hadn’t looked up I would have missed that one! At around 4-5am , Orion and Taurus were up in the sky.
Personal meteor count : 2
Didn’t have any luck capturing any meteor streaks in my DSLR despite draining 2 full batteries, perhaps others may have been luckier. Had an interesting kite flying session on Sunday morning but will leave others to elaborate on that interesting time involving an iphone

Thanks for looking.
regards,
Junwei