Having been hot and sunny here for the last few days I decided that finally I would get my scope out to take a quick look at the beckoning summer sky.
Scope: 4.5" Skywatcher EQ1 Newtonian
First stop M13: Found it with my wide angle lens. Inserted my Super 10. (50x) A even grey fuzz. This was a lovely view. I didn't expect much at the mo. The sky was still quite light despite gone 11:00. After inserting the 2x Barlow I couldn't see much. Except a bright fuzzy point and a swimming atmosphere. It was 24°C here yesterday. All the houses were releasing the built up heat.
Lyra was just visable above the conifers. I tried for M57. With the wide angle lens I could see a faint elongated smudge. The 10mm actually made it fainter. I dared the barlow Just moving atmosphere.
I moved the scope around to a better view of Cygnus and Lyra. Tried for Epsilon Lyrae. If I found it it was just two stars. An easier catch was Albireo. The Gold and Blue stars sparkled through all lenses. I had to defocus a bit through the barlow.
By now the sky was darker and I could see stars down to around 5th mag. I retried M13. This time it showed a bright core and a mottled halo. The barlow worked better now. In steady moments I could resolve a couple of stars in the halo. It was getting late and I decided to go in and to bed after that. The sky wasn't finnished quite yet though... A satellite flew into view. It passed between Ophiuchus' head and Hercules' feet. It fadded in Cygnus. I made guesses as to the mag. Around Alpha Oph and Gamma Cyg. Once the scope was put away I logged onto Heavens-above. (Even though it was late.) The satellite was the UARS (Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite).
All in all not a bad session.