
After having my Nexstar 8 for about a month now, I finally felt like I got my $$$ worth early this morning!
The sky cleared up around midnight, and I started with some indoor observing of the lower half of the Scorpius region through my living room window including NGC 6231 the northern jewel box and Globular Clusters NGC 6388, 6397 and 6541 in the neighbourhood. I noted that the sky was clearer than previous nights and I could even see part of Saggitarius through the window. There are usually some thin high clouds in that area and I have not been able to observe that region from my viewing angle so far.
Seizing the opportunity, I decided to haul the Nexstar 8 setup downstairs to the field which I had identified as a potentially good observing location some days ago. Without wasting any time to dismantle and pack the parts into my usual carriers, I slung the powertank on one shoulder, stuffed my OIII filter (in case of course) into my left pocket, my 25mm eyepiece in a bolt case into the right pocket and heaved the Nexstar 8 over my other shoulder, with both arms supporting the tripod legs sticking out in front of me. When I finally got downstairs ... the field looked muuuch further than I thought

After a quick 2 star alignment on Vega and Antares, I was all set!
Though I only had one 25mm eyepiece with me, which gives me 50x magnification, it was sufficient and the effort of hauling the scope down was all well worth it as the clear sky all around me allowed me to do a mini Messier shoot out on the following:
M4, M6, M7, M8, M13, M17, M22, M25, M28, M54, M57, M69, M70, M80
This was the first time I observed M8 Lagoon Nebula and M17 Swan Nebula in Singapore with my own scope. The OIII filter worked its magic on M8 and M17. Without the filter, these celestial wonders are just barely visible in our light polluted skies. The filter improved the contrast of these objects by the significant darkening of the background, allowing the eye to better appreciate the nebulous glow against an almost black background. I also spent a bit more time observing old favourites which I have not seen in over 10 years, the larger Globular Clusters M13 in Hercules and M22 in Saggitarius, and the Ring Nebula M57 in Lyra.
As I have to work later today, I packed up after about an hour on the field. Hope to have more clear skies like this in the coming days and weeks ahead!
