Johnschiap
Johnschiap
Johnschiap

Mike and Diane’s Ring of Fire Habanero. Hot but flavorful, good on may things, especially eggs.

Mike and Diane’s Ring of Fire Habanero. Hot but flavorful, good on may things, especially eggs.

He most certainly did not cook the turkey all the way in the exhaust. The three times they showed the dashboard, the clock showed 1:58, 1:56 and 1:55 successively (on 1/1/2000). It would take hours to cook a turkey in short bursts of flame.

He most certainly did not cook the turkey all the way in the exhaust. The three times they showed the dashboard, the clock showed 1:58, 1:56 and 1:55 successively (on 1/1/2000). It would take hours to cook a turkey in short bursts of flame.

He most certainly did not cook the turkey all the way in the exhaust. The three times they showed the dashboard, the clock showed 1:58, 1:56 and 1:55 successively (on 1/1/2000). It would take hours to cook a turkey in short bursts of flame.

The guy on the left is Donald O'Connor, a great dancer in his own right. He was more physical and comical than Kelly. Google O'Connor's great "Make 'Em Laugh" number from "Singin' In The Rain".

We were caught in this traffic jam yesterday afternoon. Got on the Leverett Connector ramp after leaving the Science Museum without realizing what was going on. They closed the ramp about 6 cars behind us and we were stuck. Moved about 100 yards near the Garden in 45 minutes before being able to cut over to the left

Or Saxon.

I don't believe that I did "tell him to shut up..." That was someone else, and they weren't that rude. Since this is a subject that interests me, I clicked on the links in the various articles and was merely attempting to share what I found out and was able to infer, having a little knowledge of the field. I agree

While neither his own website (http://georgeastro.weebly.com/index.html) nor the Space.com article explicitly say he is an amateur, it is clear to me (I have done some astrophotography and hung out on the same forums and websites mentioned in the Space.com article) that he is. First, if he was a professional

Both observations, Peterson's visual and Hall's video, were made with Meade LX200GPS 'scopes. They are ubiquitous.

The guy who took the video apparently is an amateur. He was using a 12" Meade LX200GPS which is a consumer telescope. Expensive, but widely used by amateur astrophotographers. Much amateur astrophotography, and almost all planetary, is done in video. The photographer takes the best frames from a session, discarding