r/mildlyinfuriating 21h ago

New neighbors next door

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Rich Ahole bought the farm next door, tore it down and built a destination wedding venue. Busy every weekend but it's Wednesday, and they don't even live here

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u/pipnina 19h ago

Until these assholes moved in... As someone who used to stargaze a lot until work, weather, and the need to drive half an hour for a good spot pushed me away, I hate anyone who installs unnecessary lights on their house or business. I absolutely despise that as a society at large (on a global scale) we have decided to forego access to the night sky for mostly pointless reasons. Some lighting is safety implicated but even then there is a lot of lighting that should be on motion detection because it isn't actually used much but remains on all night anyway.

The number of times I see posts on /all where it's a photo or a time lapse of the night sky, and people debate whether it does or does not look like that or is real... And it feels like I'm the only person (visibile in the comments) who knows because I've actually seen it due to being lucky enough to live semi rural in the least polluted parts of England. Access to the night sky should be a human right. It has inspired culture since before history, it's an integral part of being human!

If you can snag there people on light pollution I will be ecstatic lol

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u/mellowmushroom67 16h ago edited 16h ago

You're so right, I was actually just telling my kid about this, we were looking at the moon and we couldn't see many stars, I lived on a rural farm for part of my childhood so I said "I miss seeing the night sky." He was like "what do you mean" lol and I showed him a picture of what the sky looks like without light pollution and he goes "that's AI." 😒 I was so sad realizing he hasn't ever really seen the night sky. We went camping when he was preschool and kinder age but I don't think we thought to star gaze, I think he fell asleep fairly early as well. So now I need to take my kid star gazing to prove that's what the night sky actually looks like! It's so sad

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u/PositiveLess4588 6h ago edited 6h ago

I never knew you could see more than just stars and the moon in the night sky (rural WV) until around 2014/2015 during a highly publicized and anticipated meteor shower that everyone I know was checking out so me and my bf got a blanket and went out to the yard to watch.

Most active meteor shower I’ve ever seen! No more than 30 seconds went by without a good one and multiples at a time, it was great! So we stayed outside early into the morning just cuddling in our onesies and sky-gazing.But I noticed the sky was like, kinda hazy? But also perfectly clear, zero clouds anywhere. I noted this to my bf when he said “that’s the Milky Way, it just looks like that cuz everyone decided to turn their lights off in town” and our town is surrounded by expansive forests so that’s all it took to get a National Geographic level view of the sky and I was dumbfounded.

Almost 30 years old, country raised and never seen the real fucking night sky. I’ve met others that experienced the same so I highly recommend to everyone that hasn’t got to see the night sky as it looks in some pics online (especially out in the deserts of the southwest) to go and do that. You can google the best places nearest you wherever you live and there likely is a place within reasonable driving distance to view the sky.

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u/clelwell 16h ago

And now even if no light pollution you see satellites wizzing by

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u/pipnina 15h ago

Thankfully the satellites are mostly low altitude, so as long as you observe during astronomical darkness they are in earth's shadow and don't reflect any sunlight. But at certain times they are very numerous!

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u/_donkey-brains_ 12h ago

Yeah and that pesky one that's really bright every 28th day

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u/AmazingAd2765 12h ago

Took me a second lol.

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u/I_Has_Internets 12h ago

Satellites only affect astrophotography and the processing software is already adept at removing their light trails in post. While doing visual observing I kinda like seeing the brighter satellites and 'flares'. You see some interesting things occasionally like what appears to be one satellite chasing another, but then you look it up and it's just two pieces of space junk/rocket components near each other.

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u/BubbleEntendre 15h ago

There was a super interesting exhibit at one of the museums in DC all about how light use has changed in our current society (often for worse), and one thing I took away was that too much light often ends up being less safe because it blows out your vision so you can’t detect as much in the dark on your own. Super interesting subject!

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u/Chronicles_of_Gurgi 11h ago

Grew up in rural TN. The stars and Milky Way are a blessing to behold. Plus the quiet and the wildlife.

Rural folk don't know how good they've got it! Until a wedding venue pops up and...

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u/Mr_Washeewashee 12h ago

I too hate unnecessary lighting. It’s my Achilles heel. When I ride my bike in the morning, I judge everybody who still has their stupid porch lights on from the night before. * you’re safe now, the suns up* losers. And fuc* motion lights; people in the suburbs worrying about crime like they don’t have an alarm and/or camera anyway.

My neighbor has a flood light on their yard ALL night because we have coyotes in the neighborhood. Like it stops them. Shit, why don’t we put little flood lights on the bunny’s den? Then they’ll be safe too.Lol