On 23 Nov 2021 at 08:19a, Mike Dippel pondered and said...
We've seen every space lauch out of Cape Canaveral from our back yard. A daytime launch is harder to see, but my 44 year old son can spot it in
the sky well before his parents can :)
I'm jealous :)
All of my 'experiences' are based on watching live stream coverage on the Internet which I have to say is far better than days of old when you hoped free to air TV networks would cover something. But going back to the 80s then yep it was the telly for me, watching shuttle launches etc. live when they were being broadcast.
We even saw the space station orbit past us one time. It was daytime and harder to see, but we saw it.
I have an app that lets me know for the coming 10 days when the ISS will pass nearby and what it's brightness will be. I often go outside in the evening to watch it whiz by for 3-6 mins :) It's cool.
As a ham radio operator (ZL4PH) I have also worked the repeater gear on the ISS when it has passed over and made contact with other New Zealand based radio operators also listening and working the ISS gear's frequencies.
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/11/06 (Linux/64)
* Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)