Although weather forecast was cloudy skies for last night, I set up my 10" LX90 about sunset to try to get some viewing before the clouds closed in. Wanted to try my new 17mm Nagler on Episilon Lyrae. Skies were mostly clear when I set up - and remainded so during astronomical twilight. Lyra was obscured by trees, so I viewed some other targets while waiting for this constellation to show itself. Saw an interesting carbon star in Canes Venatici, Gamma CVn (SAO-44317), and a few doubles in Coma Berenices and Bootes.
About 10:30pm noticed that Vega was well clear of the trees in the eastern sky, so I shifted to Lyra. No trouble finding Epsilon Lyrae, and after the telescope settled down could very clearly discern both doubles with the 17mm eyepiece, at about 147x magnification. Put in the older 9mm plossl I have (about 278x magnification), and although the view wasn't as spectular as the Nagler, the splits were certainly more noticeable. Observed for several minutes and sketched the fov - before the expected cloud cover came in.
