Did You Wanna Be A Cowboy When You Were Little?

What’s more uniquely American than the American Cowboy?  Try to think of anything that defines this country more than punchin’ cows across northern Texas into places like Oklahoma, Missouri, Colorado and Nebraska carrying a six-shooter and a Winchester.  The American Cowboy is the iconic image of this country throughout the world.  Go to any other country, and I mean ANY other country and ask what is known about 19th century American history.  Yep, it’s the cowboy.  Romanticized on stage, screen and film.

But was the “cowboy” always a respected member of the cattle drive?  Hardly; you can thank Buffalo Bill Cody and his Wild West Show and Hollywood for changing the term into something romantic and heroic.  Truth is that the term cowboy was used as a derogatory term in 2 different ways.

1st: like a shepard in the bible, cattle drivers were on the bottom of social rung.  Dirty, poor, ruffian and couldn’t get any other job.

2nd: cowboy was often used to describe a troublemaker, outlaw or thief.  In Tombstone the McLaury’s and Clantons were cattle theives and therefore referred to as “cowboys”.

So, Yipee Ki Yo Ki Yay – get along little dogie.

AZ bob

Saturn at Equinox

My last post in January, Saturn Goes Commando, is about Saturn at its equinox.  This means the rings are now edge on with the sun and at their thinnest from our vantage on earth.  You cannot see the rings at all from my astrobinoculars.  Check out this picture from Ciclops http://ciclops.org/view/5815/Shadow_South_of_Another?js=1

Saturn at Equinox
Saturn at Equinox

Ciclops.org is the official website for the Cassini mission.  Check it out.

If you look on the sphere of the planet you can see the razor thin shadow line of the rings.  That little bump on the ring shadow is the shadow of the moon Enceladus.  Enceladus is not in the picture since it orbits beyond the rings but it still casts a shadow on Saturn.

Man I love this stuff.

bob

Saturn Goes Commando

     The jewel of the solar system, Saturn, is going naked from our viewpoint for a while.  If you have a telescope, watch the ring plane disappear and reappear over the next few months.  The actual disappearance will be in September, but will be unobservable.  Saturn will be on the opposite side of the sun from us. 

     Saturn has a tilt of approximately 26.7 degrees, the Earth has a 23.5 degree tilt.  That means every so often our viewpoint crosses the ring plane and the rings disappear.  The rings are incredibly thin, a few yards at most, yet the full diameter of the rings is over 124,000 miles.  That ratio means that the rings would be far sharper than a razor in relation to its diameter.  Here’s a classic view of Saturn’s rings from www.spacetelescope.org.

Classic view of Saturn
Classic view of Saturn

     But this how Saturn looks now.  Seems almost naked without the rings.

Saturn Almost Naked
Saturn Almost Naked
     By the way, that’s Titan just above the rings to the left in the picture and that’s Titans shadow on the southern part of Saturn (image from the Hubble Space Telescope).  Titan is the only moon in the solar system that has an atmosphere, which is why it looks fuzzy.  Soon there will no rings to see at all, but in a few months beginning after September, they’ll start to reappear.
     By the way, Titan gives us another great reference to the size of Earth.  Titan is about 40 percent the diameter of Earth.  So picture that fuzzy orange dot a little over double the size and that gives you what Earth would look like in orbit around Saturn.  Saturn is the 2nd largest planet, behind Jupiter, in our solar system.
     bob

Ganymede Runs, But Can’t Hide

Here’s one of the latest of thousands of photos from the Hubble Space Telescope.

That’s the moon Ganymede in its orbit going behind Jupiter.  Ganymede is the largest of the moons orbiting not only Jupiter, but the largest moon in the solar system.  It is slightly larger than Mercury with a diameter of 3,270 miles, (Mercury is 3,032 miles).  That means if it were in orbit around the sun, it would be classified as a planet.  It also gives the scale of the size of Jupiter.  Ganymede is approximately 40% the size of Earth.  If you look closely at the Great Red Spot on Jupiter, which is a gigantic storm that’s been raging for centuries, Earth would easily fit inside with plenty of room to spare.

bob

Phil Plait – A Bad Astronomer

A few of you have asked where I get my information on Science and Astronomy.  I know Astronomy is a Science, I list it separately because I spend 2/3 of my reading time on Astronomy alone.  There are many great websites and blogs on the Internet.  Many of them will be linked on www.possum-holler.com still scheduled to go online soon.

One that I like in particular is Space Daily.  They send out daily e-mails on on the latest space science news, www.spacedaily.com.  Check it out.

The website and blog I’ve read the longest is Dr. Phil Plait’s, www.badastronomy.com, now a part of Discover.  I was on his e-mail list before blogs were around and read his newsletters.  DON’T be fooled by the name Bad Astronomy, he’s passionate about Science, especially Astronomy and is a well known Skeptic.  The name Bad Astronomy is a play on words.  His first book is called Bad Astronomy, where he debunks all kinds of anti-science gibberish, especially the moon landings.  It’s amazing to me that so many people believe we never went to the moon.  They are easily fooled by anti-science nonsense and Phil does an excellent job explaining why they are wrong and how we, as a nation, achieved this remarkable feat.  I strongly recommend his book to anyone.  I will occasionally steal ideas from his blog like the post showing the Science/Astrology picture on the post Anti-Science HaHa.

His second book I purchased last month, an autographed copy from The James Randi Education Foundation, www.randi.org,  – Death From The Skies.  This book details ways the world could end, from Gamma Rays to Asteroids explained in laymen terms.  I haven’t read it yet, but it has received good reviews and with his sense of humor should be excellent reading.

The reason I thought to let you all know about Phil is his latest post says he will be in Phoenix today.  No, I’ve never met him and don’t know why he’s here.  Mere mortals like me just stand in the shadows and suck out all the fascinating information from scientists.  It just keyed into my brain to let you know about him.

bob

Who’s The Most Famous Pimp You’ve Heard Of?

Dodge City Marshall?  Tombstone City Marshall?  Bounty Hunter?  Gunslinger?  Hero of the west?

None of the above.

The famous Wyatt Earp and his brothers Virgil, Morgan and James ran gambling tables and pimped at the Oriental Saloon in Tombstone.  In fact, they were known locally as the Pimp Brothers.

Bit O’ History.  The brothers moved to Tombstone to trade on the miners who were working the silver mine.  Many miners of the day were paid daily in coin, or if hired steady, paid weekly, so they were among the few at that time that had a steady income.  Miners were notoriously ruffian.  Transient by nature, miners generally spent most of their extra money in the saloons getting their 3 square meals a day for lonely men in about 2 hours.  Unlike the Longbranch Saloon on Gunsmoke that came across almost as a family run hotel, most western saloons of the 1800’s generally offered 3 services: drinking, gambling and prostitution.  No girls on a stage doing the Can-Can dance or flirting with the local Marshall in most establishments.  Especially in classy or respected establishments early on, prostitutes most often were not allowed downstairs in the saloon because this would have been considered inappropriate.  Later the “working women” could make appearances in certain areas of a Saloon to mingle with the cliental.

The Earp brothers, minus the youngest brother Warren, moved to Tombstone and staked the “gambling wall” of the Oriental Saloon on the northeast corner of 5th and Allen streets.  Saloons of this era were generally long and narrow, often 2 story frame buildings laid out remarkably similar throughout the west.  The bar was along 1 wall, the gaming tables along the opposite wall and the rooms called “cribs” were upstairs.  The cribs were not hotel rooms as often depicted in the movies, but were very small closet size rooms that the “soiled doves” used to ply their trade.  It was the responsibility of the Gamblers to make sure the customers had plenty to drink while gambling and waiting their turn for a tumble, (yes, it was often referred to as a tumble).  A number system was often used to keep track of the cribs in use and to make sure no customer spent too much time with one of the girls.  As any modern restaurant owner will tell you, turnover is the key to making money.

Footnote: The term Gambler has changed somewhat over the last century.  Today a gambler is the person who is gambling, but in the old west era “Gambler” referred to the men who rented, owned or staked the gaming tables.  Dealers were also referred to as a Gambler.  Customers were called just that, customers.

In time, grifting (swindling) and gunplay became rampant.  Tombstone was right on the edge of having no effective law enforcement after City Marshall Frank White was murdered by Curley Bill Brocius, and certainly there was little control over the local “trade”.  The lack of law enforcement is what caused one of the Earp brothers to step forward and become a Tombstone City Marshall: it was Virgil, not Wyatt.  Interestingly enough if Virgil needed to deputize one of the brothers, it was usually Morgan who helped, not Wyatt.

So were the Earp brothers considered lowlifes for their lifestyle?  Not really.  The oldest brother James’ wife was an active prostitute while he bartended and pimped for her before they moved to Tombstone, this while they were married.  Wyatt’s common law wife Mattie was a former prostitute.  Gamblers and Pimps were inline with Bartenders as far as respect in the community.  A fair Gambler was also the enforcer of proper behavior in the saloon, not the bartender, so they often times inspired fear as well as respect.  Gamblers were expected to purport themselves as professionals at all times and to dress accordingly.  Gamblers often dressed very similarly in towns even at competing saloons and could easily be identified because of the style of their attire.  The Earp brothers were no different, they dressed like all respected Gamblers in Tombstone.

Now – this little Bit O’ History begs other interesting questions like:

The Shootout at the OK Corral happened in the OK Corral, right? ……… wrong

The main gambling game at saloons was poker, right? ………. nope

Doc Holiday was an accurate shot and the fastest on the draw, right? …….. snicker

Wyatt was a respected former lawman, right? ……. meh

The Earp brothers lasting impression on Tombstone was from years of living there, right? …….. nah

A “cowboy” in the late 1800’s was a hero in a white hat with a Colt 6 shooter on the hip and Winchester rifle right? ……. sigh

The answers coming soon to a Holler near you.

AZ bob

Free Nights Stay at the Pilot Knob Hotel

There is so much sunshine in Arizona that we can plan a picnic on just about any day of the year months in advance.  Go ahead, pick a date sometime in 2009, mark your calendar and check the weather when that day comes around.  Over 330 days a year we have sunshine at least half the day.  An additional 22 days that the sun peeks through for a short time.

But guess what?  It’s December 12th and there’s cloud cover this evening and I can’t see the giant full moon at perigee rising in the east that is discussed in the previous post, Drop Your Drawers For The Biggest Full Moon Of The Year.  Sigh

What’s this have to do with a free nights stay at the Pilot Knob Hotel?  Normally clear whether in Arizona.

Notice the Victorian Dress
Notice the Victorian Dress

In Yuma, AZ, the Pilot Knob Hotel had this offer across the top of the building.  Prettie safe bet that they collected the rent most every night, although Yuma does average some 5 whole days a year that the sun never peeks through the clouds.  The hotel closed and was torn down over 50 years ago, but they didn’t go out of business because of the weather, just changing times.

Drop Your Drawers for the Biggest Full Moon of the Year

Ever notice that the moon looks bigger when it’s low on the horizon, seen through trees or next to buildings?

This optical illusion is not fully understood by scientists or psychologists.  But there is truth to the fact that the moon appears larger at times because it is slightly closer to the earth.  No orbiting body has a perfectly circular orbit.  Orbiting bodies like asteroids, planets, moons, etc. have elliptical orbits and Astronomers refer to the apogee and perigee of orbiting bodies.  Apogee is when the moon, or other orbiting body, is farther away and Perigee is when the moon is closer to the earth.

This Friday, Dec. 12, the Full Moon is at Perigee in the east.  Moonrise will be a Full Moon about 31,000 miles closer than when the moon is at Apogee.  If my math is correct, that’s about 14% closer.  Since you will see this at sunset, the optical illusion should be spectacular.  A truly giant moon rise in the east.  The moon will also be about 30% brighter, so you will be able to easily see the moon before sunset and watch as it rises, appearing to get smaller throughout the evening.  For your reference hold your thumb out at arms length to gauge the size of the moon.  As the moon rises and appears to get smaller you will notice that the size in relation to your thumb will NOT change.  Cool.

Cheek to Cheek
Cheek to Cheek

So how come you can’t see the Apollo landing sites, even with the Hubble Space Telescope?

AZ bob

2009 International Year of Astronomy

2009 has been dedicated by the United Nations as the International Year of Astronomy.  There will be worldwide events starting with the dedication in Paris January 15th.  Check out the website at www.astronomy2009.org.

The main thing this means to amateurs like me is that telescopes will be available on the web like never before.  Currently there are several telescopes available to the public through links on the Internet.  People simply log-on, suggest certain views of the night sky and if chosen, the telescope slews to the requested object.  Recently I asked for a 60 second viewing of M33, the Pinwheel Galaxy, just for fun.  The telescope site is in the Canary Islands off the coast of Africa.  Isn’t the Internet incredible.  Unfortunately I missed the screen capture, but have requested the picture be e-mailed to me.  I’ll post it when it arrives.

bob

Conjunction Junction

Karen, Mare the Bare and our neighbors Chuck, Deb, Daniel and Henry came over to look at the Moon, Venus and Jupiter during the conjunction.  Through my astro binoculars we could clearly see 3 of the 4 Galilean moons even with a bright street lamp directly across the street.  We also observed the Crescent Moon.  The south pole of moon was brilliantly lit affording an incredible view of the mountain ranges and craters.  The “star” of the night was clearly seeing Boussingault Crater and the smaller crater inside as well as the central mountain peak created from the impact 3 1/2 billion years ago.

Unfortunately you couldn’t see the phase of Venus because of the city lights and haze.  Venus looked like a round fuzzy ball.  The best part of tracking the phases, just like the moon, is this helps explain how Galileo figured out that the earth was not center of the solar system, and therefore not the center of the universe.  The moon has phases because it obviously orbits the earth.  Venus has phases just the same, but it orbits the sun.  Through his telescope, Galileo could record the phases of Venus and realized the the crescents were always created by the sun being on the sunlit side.  Modeling this information on paper with the day and night of earth, he realized that the earth has phases just like any other planet in orbit around the sun if you could view the earth from space.  Although he couldn’t see phases on Mercury, too close to the sun and therefore washed out, he understood the nature of orbital rotation, now called Orbital Mechanics.  Unfortunatley for Galileo, the catholic church was not ready to admit that the earth wasn’t the center of the universe and forced him to recant, and then kept him under house arrest for the rest of his life.

bob