Hi Bill,<br />Thanks again.<br /><br /><font color="yellow">There is a gold mine of stuff to look at, but knowing where is now the question. If I suggest the Orion Nebula, I don't know if you even know where the Orion Constellation is. The Nebula is the Grand Object of the winter sky. Look for the Orion Belt and the three stars below the belt that represent the sword. The Nebula is sort of splattered between the second and third star of the sword. There are many things to look at, but difficult to explain. <br /></font><br />I think I can find my way around Orion and the Big Dipper like you described. Thats great for me. That gives me some more reference points and practice in finding deep space objects.<br /><br /><font color="yellow">I return to the suggestion of getting Starry Night and a pair of binoculars. Another suggestion is the Orion Deep Sky 600 Map. All of these will amaze you how many objects there are to look at and very easy to find. </font><br />I will be purchasing start chart, finder, starry night, binocs over time. Thanks for the suggestions.<br /><br /><font color="yellow"><br />Once you learn a few patterns, and use a map such as the Deep Sky 600, you will find it's like learning to ride a bike. It never changes, or changes very little. <br /></font><br /><br />I am noticing that each night I take the scope out, more obects become immediately familiar without needing to question them. Things like polaris, betelgeuse, rigel, moon(kidding) so far. I am glad I've got a manual dobsonian for my first scope. This learning is half of the fun. My kids (6 and 5) are enjoying the ride too! Saturn blew them away <img src="/images/icons/smile.gif" /> They still talk about it a few days later.<br /><br />Thanks,<br />Ryan