The Saga of an Astronomer's Hat
When a rampaging bushfire tore through Australia's Warrumbungle National Park, home to Siding Spring Observatory, it spared all of the telescopes but destroyed the homes of several staffers — the author's among them. But this anecdote shows that there can be a glimmer of humor even in the midst of such devastation.
Last October, Tanya and I flew to Europe to visit one of her daughters. Shanna was then working on North Uist, a small island in the far northwest of Scotland, the country where I was born and grew up. After our visit we flew back to Australia. The trip back included an overnight stay in Amsterdam, so for convenience we stayed at the "Yotel" within Schiphol airport. It features tiny cubicle rooms — which, apparently, weren't small enough to prevent me from leaving my new Akubra dress hat on the only shelf in the room. That's where the saga really starts.
The solution came after I received an unrelated email from my longtime acquaintance Jaap Vreeling. It turns out that he now works in Amsterdam, and he knew that fellow Dutchman Govert Schilling was coming for the eclipse. Unfortunately, I soon learned that Govert was already in New Zealand. A few further email exchanges led to no solution — until a box unexpectedly arrived in Coonabarabran containing the undamaged Akubra!
On January 13th, that hat — along with our house, sheds, and all contents — were destroyed in the devastating fire. We escaped with our dogs and our lives but very little else. (What little warning we got came from hearing a firefighting helicopter fly overhead.)
So the best I can do is a recreation with the one hat I just happened to have in the car when I drove off: an old Siding Spring Observatory tourist floppy hat. Sorry, Jaap!
Let me add one thing more: Tanya and I have the resources to rebuild, but others are much less fortunate. Anyone wishing to aid the victims of the Coonabarabran bushfire can do so by donating either to the Warrumbungle Shire Council Mayor's Bushfire Appeal or to the ANU Siding Spring Observatory Fire Staff Emergency Relief Fund.
Rob McNaught ranks among the most prolific all-time discoverers of asteroids and comets. (His 50th comet discovery came in 2009.) In recent years he's found them on images taken with the 20-inch (0.5-meter) Uppsala Schmidt telescope at Siding Spring Observatory.
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fire, hat and visit
Rob's home and hat - oh no
Rob's Home