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Showing posts with label Rosette Nebula NGC 2244. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosette Nebula NGC 2244. Show all posts

Friday, 20 March 2026

Imaging sessions - Rosette Nebula 2244 from Wembury Beach on March 17th and 18th 2026

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A Rare Astrophotography Window: Three Moonless Nights in South Devon

Clear, moonless nights have been almost mythical across the UK this winter — rarer than golden hen’s teeth. So, when the forecast hinted at not one but three clear nights along the South Devon coastline, I could hardly believe it. March 17th arrived with that rare combination of clear skies, no moon, and a real chance to finally stretch the imaging gear again.

Planning the Session:

As always, the prep began with the usual suspects:

  • SkySafari, Clear Outside, and PhotoPills for sky conditions
  • AstroBin for inspiration
  • Telescopius for framing simulations (highly recommended if you haven’t tried it)

After running a few targets through the simulator, one object stood out:

The Rosette Nebula (NGC 2244)

 https://telescopius.com/telescope-simulator



The Rosette Nebula (NGC 2244)

It’s drifting lower in the sky now, and this week is likely my last chance to capture it at a decent altitude. With luck, I’d get around 3.5 hours of usable imaging time before it sank into the murk above the English Channel.

If you want to learn more about this beautiful emission nebula, Sky at Night has a great overview.

https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/astrophotography/nebulae/the-rosette-nebula


Choosing the Location: Wembury Beach

Wembury Beach remains my most reliable local spot for long sessions, but it comes with limitations:

  • I can only shoot NE to SW — Plymouth’s light dome dominates the north and northwest.
  • Astronomical darkness didn’t begin until 20:15.
  • The Rosette would drop into low, hazy air by around 23:30.

Still, it was the best chance I’d had in months.

Gear for the Night

  • Astro‑modded Canon 800D
  • William Optics Zenithstar 61II + field flattener
  • Sky‑Watcher EQM‑35 Pro
  • ASIair Mini, ZWO 120mm Mini, RVO 32mm guide scope
  • Sky‑Watcher Star Adventurer 2i for Milky Way shots
  • Celestron Lithium Pro + Sky‑Watcher power tank
  • Three small power banks
  • Dew heaters
  • MSM green laser for polar alignment
  • Samsung Galaxy tablet for flats (white‑screen app)

If you’re curious about any of this kit, I’ve written detailed reviews:








Night One: A Tough Start

Let’s just say the first night didn’t go to plan.

What went wrong

  • I misjudged tripod placement and had to tear down the entire rig to realign with Polaris.
  • Polar alignment took 30 minutes instead of the usual 10–15, with repeated plate‑solve failures.
  • The wind was stronger than forecast.
  • Guiding hovered around 1.20", but fluctuated unpredictably.

Lessons learned

  • Position the tripod accurately at dusk — use a compass and wait for Polaris to appear.
  • Level the tripod properly.
  • Choose a target that stays higher above the Channel haze.

Despite everything…

I still loved it. Hot brews from the Primus stove, calibration frames done, and a great chat with a fellow astronomer who let me view Jupiter, her moons, and two shadow transits through his 10" Dobsonian. Magical moments like that make the frustrations worth it.

Night One Settings

  • ISO 1600
  • 20 × 360s subs
  • 10 darks
  • 30 bias
  • 50 flats
  • Guiding average 1.25"

Night Two: Better Setup, Worse Wind

Night two was a different story — and a much better one.

Improvements

  • Tripod orientation was spot‑on thanks to waiting for Polaris and using a compass app.
  • Polar alignment was smooth and accurate.
  • Imaging began at 20:15, a full hour earlier than the previous night.

A note on the MSM laser

Tightening the securing screw seems to nudge the laser point slightly off target. It’s subtle, but enough to throw off alignment. Something to rethink.

The wind… again

Guiding was chaotic:

  • Best: 1.20–1.70"
  • Worst: 25.50"
  • My friend’s identical setup hit 40.30" at times

Despite the conditions, I salvaged 20 good subs, giving me:

Total so far

40 × 360s exposures — around 3.5 hours of data.

Night Two Settings

  • ISO 1600
  • 24 × 360s subs
  • 10 darks
  • 30 bias
  • 50 flats
  • Guiding: 1.25" low → 25.50" high (average ~1.75" when wind eased)

A great social night

My friend brought his new portable GOTO Celestron SCT, and we spent time hopping between Jupiter and deep‑sky objects. It reminded me that I should take my Sky‑Watcher Star Discovery 150i out more often to keep my visual observing skills sharp.

You can read my post about the above newtonian scope here: https://undersouthwestskies.blogspot.com/2025/02/my-first-telescope-skywatcher-star.html

The windchill was brutal, but the raised boot hatches made a decent windbreak, and the Primus stove kept the tea flowing — even if the piezo ignition finally gave up the ghost.

What’s Next?

I’ll be stacking and processing the combined data over the next few days and will share the final Rosette Nebula image along with a full workflow breakdown in a separate post.

It feels brilliant to finally be back under the stars after such a long run of poor weather. Even with the frustrations, these two nights reminded me why I love astrophotography: the challenge, the problem‑solving, the community, and the quiet joy of watching the sky unfold above the South West coastline.


Now I am off to watch this video from Rich - to remind myself on how to stack multiple night's data in Siril! 





Post processing

Regular blog visitors will know I am a great fan of SIRIL software - free, open source and easy to master. I will write a full post about post editing the data collected but essentially I stacked each night separately and then combined the processed lights from each night in one final stack - resulting in the following images, ready for further editing

Night one

Night two

combined nights data 

You can find details of my SIRIL workflow here: https://undersouthwestskies.blogspot.com/2025/12/beginner-tutorial-workflow-for-using.html