I would think the light pollution (even in Valencia) would make it rather difficult for this. I can only recall being in a few places that had absolutely no light pollution that allowed to me see the Milky Way in all of its glory...and every single one of those locations were in Afghanistan.
Found a light pollution map that might help out.
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If you look at the US and Europe you will see that very few people are ever going to have a chance to see the Milky Way:
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Best Posts in Thread: Stargazing
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I plan to have a public observing and drinking session in early August. Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Mars and all the cool star clusters in the Milky Way will be well placed. The bright moon will be out of the picture. I just have to pray for clear skies. Will post details later for anyone who may be interested.-
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There are 2 advantages to observing here:
1. The Milky Way and Ecliptic are much higher in the sky than in mid-Northern latitudes. Less atmospheric distortion to look thru.
2. Even during the Summer, you have at least 9 hours of total darkness.
Your eyes need to be dark adapted! You cannot go outside after staring at a laptop screen and expect to see lots of stars. You need to take a couple of beers outside, close your eyes until you've consumed the beers (approx 20min), then look up. If your consumption rate is faster like mine, bring 3 or 4 beers.
I took the following image after 4 beers. This is the Northern Milky Way above my house at 2am.
Altair is at the Zenith. The camera's image sensor is capturing stars down to +8.5 magnitude. Of course you can't see this with the naked eye. But a pair of 7x50 binoculars will show every star in this image!
Very cool!-
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From my terrace:
It's really not bad here once your eyes are dark-adapted.
Of course this is a long exposure, but there's no problem seeing star clusters and nebula thru binoculars or a scope. The sky is usually not this transparent because of the humid air, but the seeing is very steady. You can get great high magnification views of the Moon, Sun and planets.
Again, from my terrace:
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Visibility is worsened by all the pollution coming out of tailpipes. I also believe I read somewhere that LED lights amplify the problem as they emit light of all colors and cannot be filtered out by telescopes.-
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As far as my camera voodoo goes, every star in the images that I post can be seen with a pair of 7x50 binoculars. Including the Andromeda Galaxy, rising above the light dome of Dumaguete in this image:
The tricky part is that you have to look up.-
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