VicSouth
Desert Spring
Star Party
at the
Little Desert Nature Lodge
previous VicSouths
2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020-2021 2022 2023 20242003
This very first VicSouth in 2003 was organised at short notice so the astronomers were vastly outnumbered by the Lodge's other guests. Nonetheless, the few of us who did get there were very pleased with the venue and its dark skies, so we decided immediately to (1) make VicSouth an annual event in future, and (2) take over the entire Lodge for each VicSouth and make it even darker on the outside.
The entrance to Little Desert Nature Lodge.
Setting up on the Lodge lawn on Friday evening.
Crux (upside down) at about 11pm on Saturday night. Canon Powershot A40 on tripod, 15 second exposure, approximately equivalent to the naked-eye view. Centre of Crux is only ~7 degrees above the horizon!
Some wildflowers.
One of the locals ignoring a telescope... :-)
The campground on Sunday afternoon.
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2004
About 90 people made it to this second VicSouth, and over 20 of them stayed for this year's optional third night. Which was just as well because the third night was the only really clear night! Three nights became the standard duration for later VicSouths, with the occasional four-nighter if VicSouth occurred just before the Melbourne Cup (public holiday in Vic).
Also for the first time this year we had pre-booked the entire Lodge. This made it much easier to enforce light pollution control, and ensured that our nocturnal activities didn't bother other guests.
Australian Sky and Telescope
A four page report of the 2004 VicSouth was published in the February 2005 Australian Sky and Telescope magazine; and we've got their permission to publish these medium-resolution page scans of the article.




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2005
Nearly 100 people came to VicSouth 2005 and many stayed for all three nights. Friday night was totally clear for the public session (and afterwards), enabling 150+ visitors to view the night sky through dozens of telescopes. Saturday night was also clear -- except for one inconsiderate jet pilot who put a contrail over us at sunset! Sunday night was clouded out, enabling everyone to watch the movie and have an early bedtime before their long drive home on Monday.
Sky and Space
A three page pictorial of VicSouth 2005 appeared in the January 2006 Sky and Space magazine; and they have sent us a downloadable copy of the article. Thanks guys.
And now some pictures by Perry Vlahos, with commentary by the webmaster.. ;-)
Part of the main lawn at the Lodge -- before we infested it with telescopes and astronomers!
Another tranquil scene near the Lodge....
and then the astronomers came....
with some little telescopes,...
some not-so-little telescopes,...
and some expensive telescopes.
Plus lots of pairs of binoculars.
During the day some of us met the Lodge residents,...
...including their renowned Malleefowls.
Some of us also had a look at the sun in hydrogen-alpha light,...
most of us went to the workshops and the swap meet,
and a few of us processed our previous night's observations.
The finalists in the unofficial Who Needs To Dress Well When I'm Wearing These Cool Sunglasses? Contest.
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2006
The Friday night was clear and dark (except for the thousands of brilliant stars) and a great time was had by all. Especially by those of us who stayed up until moonrise. Or beyond. And a thank you to everyone who helped with our very successful public viewing session too.
Thursday night, for the few of us who came early, wasn't bad either. Except for the other non-astronomical Lodge guests who were afraid of the dark!
Saturday night began with rain and then progressed to a spectacular lightning show. Fortunately it was a warm night so most of us sat under the verandahs and watched the action. Sunday night began well, but after a few hours the smoke from large bushfires far upwind began to reach us. The exceptionally dry winter of 2006 had left vast areas primed to burn; and Saturday's lightning ignited numerous fires.
Download (70MB wmv) a video slideshow of VicSouth 2006 by Leon Geljon.
Hmmm....this looks like an example of I Forgot My Tripod....
How did Perry Vlahos persuade dozens of the locals to sit on the grass in the twilight?
Oooh...I want one of them for xmas, and two of those, and that whatever-it-is....
The visual observing techniques workshop drew a big crowd.
A strike during Saturday night's spectacular lightning show. Several bushfires, some of which were far upwind from us in South Australia's Mallee region, were started that night. The smoke from the SA fires produced a spectacular sunset on Sunday, but slowly blotted out the stars on Sunday night.
The observing field getting busy on Friday evening.
Mike with his telescope.
Paul with his 125mm binoculars. ASSA members reading this should note the presence of cloudless twilight sky above him.
Angela and Michael with their telescopes.
Petra with her telescope.
A few seconds after your webmaster showed Petra this photo he suffered horrible injuries...
"...Mum, can I look through ALL of these telescopes??"
Mick's big one.
Graeme admiring Tim's colour coordinated t-shirt, shorts, wristwatch, and telescope.
Another black telescope.
George's big one.
And finally, David's purple one. Who cares what colour the dewshield is? You can't see it in the dark anyway....
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2007
Download Leon Geljon's video slideshow of his VicSouth 2007 trip (79MB wmv).
Three clear nights for VicSouth 2007. And Thursday night was clear too. And the daytime weather wasn't bad either...although many of us slept through it!
Dario does a dust-on-mirrors check of his big one.
Taurus and the Pleiades rise over the main observing area on Friday evening.
Crux and Carina above the trees, early Saturday morning. And the only nocturnal cloud seen all weekend! Canon Powershot A530 on tripod, 15 second exposure.
Nina and Leon observing the sun with the aid of a heliostat and....
...a Coronado hydrogen-alpha solar telescope on a tripod.
Petra won the Sky and Space subscription door prize.
Emma's big one.
Lyn's not-quite-so-big one.
Too shy to wear their name tags?
Getting ready for another night...
Ray revealed a pile of gadgetry and Blair just couldn't resist... :-)
General view of the observing area.
Saturday twilight mosaic. Canon Powershot A530 on tripod, 15 second exposures.
Mt Arapiles from Mitre Rock.
Tiny wildflowers on Mt Arapiles.
Bandicoot tracks in the sand.
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2008
Download Leon Geljon's video slideshow of his VicSouth 2008 trip (105MB wmv).
Download Phil Hart's time-lapse video of Saturday evening at VicSouth 2008 (169MB avi).
Download a time-lapse video of Blair Lade's stars and lightning photos (8MB avi).
2008 was the first year a few of us walked to the top of Mt Arapiles. And 2008 was also the first year we faced the prospect of an evacuation caused by a bushfire. Fortunately nobody died of exhaustion going up the mountain, and the local firefighters were able to keep the bushfire well away from the Lodge.
Our route to the top of Mt Arapiles wasn't this difficult....
Unfortunately the high-altitude winds brought the bushfire smoke back over the Lodge on Saturday afternoon!
Most of the people made it into this 2008 group photo.
Getting the telescopes ready, just after sunset.
Phil used this SLR digital camera to create a time-lapse video of Saturday evening at VicSouth 2008 (169MB avi).
Nina contemplates a crescent moon paired with Venus, as twilight fades to night.
Angela tries some weightlifting with an iron meteorite.
Some of the local inhabitants check out the main observing field.
Mallee flowers in Little Desert National Park.
Flowers in Little Desert National Park.
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2009
The weather for VicSouth 2009 was exceptionally hot (for November), so many telescopes stayed indoors under the air conditioners during the daytimes. Most of the astronomers joined them there!
Our invited speaker for 2009 was Rob McNaught, who told us of his "life of comets".
a VicSouth 2009 group photo
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2010













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2011









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2012
Held in mid-October, so that we could also invade northern Queensland a month later to see its total solar eclipse.

(click on this image for the 84MB MP4 public video)

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2013



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2014






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2015





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2016
Our prize sponsors for VicSouth 2016 included:
- Gama Electronics donated a QHY-5V mono guider, a QHY5L-II colour guider, and a stand-alone guider as prizes.
- Tasco Sales Australia / Meade Australia donated a pair of Acuter 15x70 binoculars and an 8-inch Dobsonian telescope as prizes.
- Optics Central donated a pair of Saxon 15x70 binoculars.
- Gondwana Telescopes also donated some items.
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2017
Our prize sponsors for VicSouth 2017 included (alphabetically):
- Saxon Australia, donated a 1026AZ3 SC refractor telescope, and a 20x80 astro binoculars.
- Sidereal Trading, donated a QHY Polemaster polar alignment camera.
- Sky-Watcher Australia, donated a Skywatcher 82deg Ultrawide Eyepiece Kit, and Meade 10x50 binoculars.
VicSouth 2017 report on Sky-Watcher's website.

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2018
Our prize sponsors for VicSouth 2018 included (alphabetically):




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2019
Our prize sponsors for VicSouth 2019 included (alphabetically):
- Australian Geographic donated books.
- Australian Sky and Telescope donated a 1 year magazine subscription.
- Binocular and Telescope Shop (Bintel) donated a Skywatcher Star Adventurer package, plus a 10% discount voucher to each VicSouth registrant.
- Celestron Australia donated beanies and a $1000 gift voucher.
- Meade Australia donated four 15x70 binoculars.
- Sidereal Trading donated a ZWO planetary camera.
- Simulation Curriculum donated copies of Starry Night 8 and Skysafari 6.
- Sky-Watcher Australia donated beanies and two $500 gift vouchers.
Also representatives from Bintel, Siderial Trading and Sky-Watcher all attended this year to showcase their products.




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2020 and 2021

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2022
Unfortunately there was no VicSouth 2022 at the Little Desert Lodge, because the Lodge was up for sale (again), there was a long delay before a new buyer was found, and the new buyer didn't take possession until November.
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2023
Our prize sponsors for VicSouth 2023 included (alphabetically):
- Optics Central donated 10x50 binoculars.
- Sky-Watcher Australia donated a Star Adventurer astrophotography mount and an ED50 guidescope camera.
Optics Central also ran a trade table at VicSouth 2023.
We had warm sunny weather all weekend, and four consecutive clear nights. Plus auroras on two of the nights!









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2024
Our prize sponsors and vendor displays for 2024 included (alphabetically):Skywatcher Australia donated their Star Adventurer Photo Kit as door prize.
Zerotech donated their Thrive 10x32 Binoculars as door prize.
Several informal vendor displays this year; including ASSA club merchandise, leftover astronomical accessories from the former Shell-Lap Supplies business in Adelaide, and The Backyard Universe's closing down sale of assorted tour equipment plus a 5 inch and 20 inch telescope.
And in memoriam: One of our earliest and most frequent commercial vendors, Matthew (of Telescopes and Astronomy), lost his long battle with cancer earlier this year :-(
Friday night was clear, Saturday night was movie night due to overcast, Sunday night was clear until about 11pm, and Monday night was clear.


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