Seal Harbour, Glengarriff, County Cork, Ireland, 25th August 1998 |
There are no sepia photographs of telescopes in the family album, which is surprising as the model being used my husband in the picture above, is his childhood telescope. It was given to him by his parents after a trip to New York in 1958. He still has it but these days he uses the binoculars, given to him by his colleagues on his retirement, to view both the passing ships in the Bocaina Straits, and the more distant heavens. On our Ireland trip we must have both been very relaxed, whilst my husband is enjoying his hobby I was indulging in mine, and some of you will remember this from my companion piece on my other blog, A Stitch in Time, where I recall the blackberrying and the chat with local dogwalker.
The Glengarriff ferry is possibly what was being viewed through the lens of the telescope, as I took the photograph above at the same time. These days it’s the Fred Olsen and Armas ferries we watch from our balcony as they make their crossings between Playa Blanca, Lanzarote, where we live, and the nearest Canary Island of Fuerteventura.
This one is just a little further down the coast from Seal Harbour, where I think we stopped for a cup of coffee from our picnic flask. A beautiful and peaceful spot.
Our Sepia Saturday picture prompt this week features telescopes and rocks, so here’s another picture demonstrating just how relaxing Seal Harbour was.
There’s nothing like a spot of rock-pooling to help one unwind. We often go for walks along our coastal path here, and as the tide goes out we scramble down to see the tiny marine creatures temporarily displaced into the rock pools. It’s the Atlantic Ocean we see from our bedroom window (not the Mediterranean as some mistakenly believe); the same ocean which washes the shores of Ireland, so, yes, it is tidal, and sometimes on the cool side but this doesn’t stop my husband taking a dip.
There he is in Seal Harbour again. There was no digital zoom in my camera in those days and I almost needed to borrow his telescope in order to see him.
Here is our very good friend Ian, clearly enjoying whatever it is he is viewing. I think this one was taken in the summer of 2001 on our holiday in Cornwall, but I can’t be precise about the location I’m afraid.
In today’s Times newspaper there’s an article and chart, explaining what we can expect from the night sky in March and in which the recent findings of the giant Hubble telescope are reported. I can’t share it in its entirety as you would have to be a subscriber to view it, but the link will take you to the chart, together with the introduction to the piece, entitled: Brilliant Venus Rises before Dawn, by Chris Lintott. It’s aimed at a UK audience of course but I can quote from it, as I’m acknowledging the source:
A moderate pair of binoculars, accompanied by fairly good eyesight will reveal the four Galilean moons. These are large worlds — Ganymede is larger than Mercury, for example — and, thanks to the push and pull of Jupiter’s gravity they are, with the exception of distant Callisto, dynamic places. The volcanoes of Io and the subsurface oceans on Europa and Ganymede owe their existence to the changing forces they experience as they swing round on slightly elliptical orbits. According to recent results from the *Hubble Space Telescope*, when Europa is farthest from the giant planet it relaxes, allowing water from under the ice to be spewed out into space. Whether this happens frequently or was just an isolated episode is an open question, as is whether the water thus expelled comes from the deep ocean or from some source closer to the surface, but it is undoubtedly an exciting development.
For more exciting developments and discoveries you need to move into the orbit of Sepia Saturday, and see what other contributors found when they peered through their telescopes.
That certainly telescoped the years since I started using grey hair dye!
ReplyDeleteFunnily enough I appear to have been dabbling with it that point too. Serves you right for leaving the bottle out in the bathroom; now look, we’ve gone the whole hog!
DeleteWow! I had to really look to see him in the water, just his head is showing, lovely pictures indeed!
ReplyDeleteNice pictures & that swim at Seal Harbour would look so cooling during our hot summer weather! I love watching the night & early morning skies too, though I don't have a telescope so use binoculars. I like to watch for the Int'l Space Station to fly over as well as observe the stars & planets & comets. Perhaps for my next birthday - or maybe Christmas - I should ask for a telescope instead of gift certificates for pedicures! Love the humor between the two of you! I stopped using hair dye when we got new flooring in the kitchen & bathrooms & I found myself laying down plastic tablecloths to protect the new floors from splattered dye. Figuring it was finally more trouble than it was worth, I let go.
ReplyDeleteI remember Glengarriff so well - as if it were yesterday! But it's more years than I care to remember since I was last there.
ReplyDeleteI meant to get my husband a telescope for Christmas last year but I totally forgot that was the plan. I'm going to try to remember for this year.
ReplyDeleteIt took me awhile to realize that wasn't TWO beach balls in Seal Harbour.
I love the link between the past 'childhood' telescope to the current day to the next generation - not sepia but still linking history
ReplyDeleteI've always preferred binoculars to telescopes, for some reason. I too love scouting rock pools for the myriad of tiny creatures revealed by the receding tide.
ReplyDeleteIt took me some time to spot your husband swimming in Seal Harbour :-). And yes, the moons of Jupiter are very interesting. I hope some day mankind will visit them (not in our lifetime I'm afraid).
ReplyDeleteYou have combined so well the themes of telescopes and rocks. Lovely photographs plus a very thoughtful introduction .
ReplyDeleteThe article on telescoping is very interesting. I studied psychology long ago and hadn't heard of it before.
ReplyDeleteA very appropriate collection for this weekend's theme. When my wife and I were in Scotland last summer looking out at the rocky coast of the North Sea we saw a few seals. They were looking up at us on the cliffs and I was struck by how from a distance a seal resembled a human head - or even a mermaid.
ReplyDeleteLove the way you book-ended with 2 telescopes, and many miles and at least 2 generations...most enjoyable post.
ReplyDeleteIreland has so many pretty bays and it looks from the photograph you had the weather to enjoy them. My first dip in the Atlantic was in Ireland. Nice to see the telescopes over the years, I suspect the modern one has all sorts of technical wizardry.
ReplyDeleteDid your husband swim with seals I wonder?
ReplyDeletea very thoughtful arrangement..the weather sunshine and balmy was so welcome to see as we continue here with arctic temps. And a great ending leading to another start with more telescoping!
ReplyDeleteThere is something wonderful about viewing the sky through a telescope. In my last home I had one in the living room for years. Many nights I'd sit there for hours watching the sky. Alas, it now sits in the closet. I haven't taken it out in years. You've inspired me to dig it out to see what I can see.
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