We Need Your Passion!Volunteers are vital to the success of the Great Basin National Park Astronomy Festival. We depend on the excitement and expertise amateur astronomers bring to help our visitors connect with the pristine dark night skies at the park.Thousands of visitors a year attend the more than 100 public astronomy programs we offer at Great Basin, with many visitors getting a glimpse of our vast Milky Way neighborhood for the first time. The capstone of our astronomy program is our annual Astronomy Festival, a three-day and three-night celebration of dark night skies held near the time of the new moon each September.
We rely on volunteers to assist with our nighttime telescope viewing opportunities during the festival. During our “star-party” events held Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights of the festival, volunteers will be asked to align their telescopes to local or deep-sky object(s) of their choice and allow the public to look through their equipment. Each night, telescope viewing is conducted for approximately 2-4 hours at our Picnic Area, located near the Lehman Caves Visitor Center. Volunteers should expect anywhere from 50 to 200 visitors per nights, with larger crowds on Friday and Saturday nights. Check-in and CampingAll volunteers MUST sign up ahead of the festival by emailing the Astronomy Ranger. This is to ensure all volunteers have an area to camp and set up equipment. We will not accept walk-up volunteers who have not pre-registered.
Thank YouEach year we host a volunteer thank-you dinner on either Friday or Saturday at 4:30 PM, catered by and held at a local Baker restaurant, or as a barbecue picnic in the park. Questions?Please email us. Thank you! |
Last updated: August 30, 2023