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Week of February 19-25, 2012: Summer Sky Sneak Peek
If you're like me, you long for summertime — and not only for its warm weather and abundant growth, but also for its nighttime sky, which is among the richest of the year. So it's usually around mid-February that I begin wandering outdoors …Read more.
Week of February 12-18, 2012: As the World Turns …
Most people know that Earth's rotation causes the sun to rise in the east and set in the west. Of course, the same is true for the moon, planets and stars.
To understand what's happening, try this experiment. Stand in the middle of a room and, …Read more.
Week of February 5-11, 2012: The ‘Linking' Star
Constellations are like states.
Just as the continental U.S. is divided into 48 such states — some large and some small — the heavens are also divided into 88 constellations. And just as every city in the U.S. (except for the District of …Read more.
Week of January 29-February 4, 2012: The Great Celestial Hunter
One of my favorite constellations in all the heavens has made its grand return to our evening sky, much as Robert Frost described in the opening lines of his famous poem "Star-Splitter":
You know Orion always comes up sideways.
Throwing a …Read more.
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Week of Feb. 21-27, 2010It's amazing how stargazing often takes me back to my childhood, when I first gazed with wonder upon the night sky. I recall how my introduction to the Big and Little dippers came from a most unlikely source. It was back in the mid-1960s at my childhood home in Pennsylvania. After enduring our long, cold winters, I always looked forward to the sunshine and warmth of spring. During late February, one of my favorite activities was to brush away the snow in my mom's garden to look for signs that life might be returning. And, oh, what excitement I felt when I first saw those tiny buds of green! Of course, at the time, I had no idea that seasonal changes were also reflected in the sky, but Walter Coursen sure did. He was an older neighbor of ours and, during early evenings, he would step outside for a cigarette while he kept watch on the world and universe around him. He was an avid fisherman, and he looked forward to springtime so he could again drop a line or two into the Delaware River. I always enjoyed listening to his grand tales whenever we encountered each other outdoors, but I was surprised to learn that he also knew a few things about the stars. Just as I would search the ground for buds of green to excite me about the approaching spring, Coursen used the sky for the same purpose.
I remember standing by his gate at the end of our yard looking toward the sky above my house in the north. And, as his pointing finger jumped from star to star, I suddenly saw what he was describing. Wow! There they were: the Big and Little dippers! He then explained how he found the North Star (also known as Polaris) by following the two "pointer" stars of the Big Dipper — the two at the end of its "bowl" — and how the dippers always reappeared like this every spring after spending the winter months out of sight behind my house. This week, go outdoors and find the dippers in your sky. And, while you're out among the stars, think back to how you first learned about such wonders of nature. You might be surprised to recall that you, too, had a "Walter" in your life. To find out more about Dennis Mammana and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM ![]()
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