I am an amateur astronomer and science writer living in Kendal, in the Lake District. This is a beautiful part of the world, but like many places in the UK, it has a serious light pollution problem. On a (rare) clear night, I can barely see much more than the Moon, a couple of bright planets and perhaps a few dozen stars.
So when my partner Stella and I, and our cat Jess, go away in our motorhome, we choose a campsite based somewhere remote and as far away as possible from light pollution. Several times a year, we leave the crowds behind and head north, to a Star Camp.
Star Camps are special events held by and for amateur astronomers who want to get away just to look at the stars for a few nights. They’re usually at remote locations, as far from light pollution as possible. Attendees take telescopes, cameras and other equipment to use under a sky that is much darker than the one they can see at home.
During the day, there are lectures, presentations and workshops, and then after sunset – so long as it is clear – everyone heads outside, pulls the covers off their telescopes and spends the night enjoying stunning views of the stars, galaxies and clusters that they usually can’t see in the mandarin-orange glow of the skies above their homes.
There are now many different Star Camps taking place during the year, but the one we visit most is held at our favourite location in the whole country – Kielder Campsite, in Northumberland.
Kielder Star Camp
This story is from the August 2023 edition of Practical Motorhome.
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This story is from the August 2023 edition of Practical Motorhome.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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