Wondering if anyone here has observed from the Steens? If so, can you share the location, and where you stayed?

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I mentioned Steens Mountain and Alvord Desert on TAC about 9-10 years ago. Some Mark Wagner guy corrected my spelling of Steens Mountain (LOL), and pointed out that this was the place for the OSP many years ago.The skies up in the mountain are superb if the conditions are decent. Anywhere, before or after Fish Lake. Light pollution is non-existent 360 degrees all the way down to the horizon, except perhaps a tiny bit on the direction of Boise, Idaho, assuming you can see zero degrees above horizon on that direction. Some of the darkest skies you'll find in the continental US along with the Tonopah, NV area, no doubt.
Steens Mountain is well over 9000 feet, and the plateaus around it are in the 7000 ft range. IIt does look like you can drive up to Steens Mountain Trailhead, which has a parking lot at about 9500 feet, eeeek, and thats on a saddle ridge, end of the road, its hiking the rest of the way up.
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Interesting. Akarsh and Paul, did you find mosquitoes a big problem?I remember one year at Lassen we had insane numbers of yellow jackets. But, even though they are rather common, the crazy occurrence was a fluke.On Sunday, January 1, 2023 at 8:44:01 PM UTC-8 TanveerSingh wrote:I spend a full week in July few years back on Steens and the area. Darkest skies, as dark as the upper himalaya. The only problem was mosquitos. Billions and trillions of them, more numerous than the stars in the universe. It was a parallel mosquito universe. Buy bulk deet, and take bath in it before you observe.That said, at the top mosquitos are far fewer
Interesting...sounds like the original OSP folks were bad-ass. But Prineville area ain't to shabby either. We spent the run up to the eclipse just north of Painted Hills NM, on the edge of the John Day River, close to Mitchell, OR.
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