Wednesday, August 18, 2010

The Perseids & Mt. Rainier

The show this year was spectacular! If you missed it this year, watch the video and read an excerpt from Visit Rainier's 2009 article on the meteor shower by Russ Mohney. Mark your calendar for next year and experience this natural wonder on the mountain!



Meteors and Things
by Russ Mohney

When viewed from a distance, Mount Rainier is a lovely thing, a source of pride for many and identity for all. Perhaps no other landmark is such a timeless icon of the Pacific Northwest. Our mountain is recognized around the world as the symbol of a natural wonderland that is unique yet wholly accessible.

Mount Rainier is the perfect platform on which to be reminded that the stars are countless in a universe that stretches beyond any concept of time and distance.

Witnesses from whirlwind cities and farm villages are bludgeoned equally by the sheer magnitude and splendor of Mount Rainier's canopy. An astonishing opportunity to experience the mountain's role as a springboard to infinity occurs just past midnight on the twelfth day of August as Earth passes through the tail of comet Swift-Tuttle. It is the focal night of the Perseids meteor shower.

Explorers of the universe may want to be at Mount Rainier for that event. They may choose to enjoy the meteor shower from the luxury of the Summit House Restaurant at Crystal Mountain or from the clarity of a campsite above society's lights. Some may choose to spend the wee morning hours at the eastern park boundary at Chinook Pass, from which the northeast parade of meteorites may best be seen.

Viewing meteorites is something akin to a fireworks show. The observer is advised to snuggle down in a folding camp chair or lie back on a sleeping bag, feet pointed southwest. The position should provide the hopeful viewer a horizon-to-horizon periphery from which to see the maximum number of tiny meteorites or "shooting stars" from about midnight until first light from the east.

The midnight starting time to the adventure is rather arbitrary, but a waxing gibbous moon on the evening of August 11 will keep the smallest meteorites hidden until a bit past the witching hour.

Bring along a blanket to mitigate the high-elevation evening chill and a supply of snacks and cocoa or coffee. Most of all, come share the small hours with friends, family, and engaged strangers as the fabulous Perseid shower unfolds.

There will be sunny afternoons to scour the wildflower meadows for the tiniest of insect eggs and next summer's flower seeds, and mornings to count the Clark's Nutcracker and warblers around the campgrounds or along the Ohanepecosh.

For now, think big. Visit Rainier for the biggest wonder on Earth--the universe!

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