(guest post by Steve)
There are few things that approach the beauty of the night sky. Find a blanket and some mosquito repellant on a warm and clear Summer night far away from the lights of a city and just watch. On a good night you can see thousands of stars and even find a galaxy whose light started its journey over two million years ago. You can loose yourself in the slowly moving beauty of the heavens.
Remember the nights can be chilly and bring some warm clothing. Bring some food and a friend and you will have something potentially deep and memorable. As a teen I used to spend time on the prairie just watching - among other things I learned coyotes love corn chips.
Every now and then a meteor streaks by.
And this is why I am writing. One of the best meteor showers of the year, the Perseids, peak on August 12th. The Earth is moving through the path traced out by a comet with the poetic name 109P/Swift-Tuttle. The comet takes about 130 years to make its elliptical orbit around the Sun. As it moves it leaves a bit of dust along its way. The closing speed of this dust and our own rock is about 35 miles per second. As these tiny bits of stuff (many are about the size of a grain of rice) strike the atmosphere, they give off a bright glow as they quickly vaporize.
There is beautiful stuff out there. Slow down enough to catch something the size of a grain of rice seventy or more miles away as it silently streaks along at 35 miles per second.
Oh - if you want to stay up until dawn I won't tell anyone.





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