Hi everyone, we are really looking forward to our weekend dark sky 
getaway on the 14th.  Weather permitting, we'll be sure to see Taurids 
and Leonids and more, oh my!  Mojo mentioned it to you all a few weeks 
ago.  To repeat part of his invite:
"We travel about 160 miles from home in Monrovia out I-10 to a spot on
BLM land south of Joshua Tree. Most of us make a night of it, catching a
couple hours sleep as we can, and enjoy breakfast the next morning at
Chiriaco Summit. Some will leave around midnight to make the trek back."
With the time change it gets dark early now, so that means you'd need to 
arrive before 5:30 p.m., It is dark in the desert, and you travel on a 2 
mile dirt road, and you need light to park on soft sand with many pokey 
bushes and cacti. This site is unfortunately not suitable for large 
trucks or RV's.
Let us know if you'd like to join us, and we'll send the map.  Plan to 
bring plenty of water, a comfortable chair and layers of clothing for 
(possibly chilly) meteor observing after midnight to dawn. I'm toying 
with a Leonid morning trek (that would be Monday night  the 16th until 
dawn on Tuesday the 17th) depending on the weather.  Maybe Warner 
Springs, maybe all the way to our observing site.  I get all sentimental 
about the Leonids as Mojo and I have been observing them as part of the 
NASA Airborne Meteor missions for many years. The bonus view will be 
Saturn in Leo - been a while since we've had a good look at the real 
Lord of the Rings. :-)
Now, on to business!
My What's Up November podcast is all about the Crab Nebula in Taurus and 
the Leonids get a brief mention at the end. 
Youtube 
http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=JPLnews#p/u/0/DSRP2XoLgxk  - 
It is also on the JPL front page and lots of other places I mention 
every month.
Blogging about  the Leonids: I've been taking a trip down memory lane 
this week. You can read my story about flying through the 1999 Leonid 
Storm, and also an  interesting (at least to me) article about the first 
airborne mission one hundred years earlier. It is the story of a woman 
astronomer (Dorothea Klumpke) observing the Leonids in a balloon!  
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/
Here's looking up!  Jane
-- 
Jane Houston Jones
Monrovia, CA
Websites: http:www.whiteoaks.com
Old Town Astronomers:  
http://www.otastro.org
My NASA JPL What's Up podcast: 
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/whatsup.cfm
Twitter: 
http://twitter.com/jhjones  http://twitter.com/CassiniSaturn
Blog: 
http://jane.whiteoaks.com/