There will appear four planets on the western horizon right after the sunset in early February.
The first one, the closest and most likely the easiest to observe is Neptune. 60 degrees up and south you'll find not only Neptune, but Mercury, Uranus and Venus also. The easiest from all these planets to see is Venus, so it's better to start with it, and then move on to other ones. All three of these planets are in the constellation Aquarius.
There are more to see with your
astromonical binoculars or
observation binoculars or whatever you have at home. So get them out your closets or get one if you don't have. And enjoy!
Steiner is bringing out the new
Peregrine XP, a
premium binocular that features 44mm objective lenses and 25mm ocular lenses to grab more light than you'd get with
binoculars featuring the typical 42mm objective lens setup. The company is using a new water-repellent Nano coating for the lenses, which are housed in a lightweight, waterproof magnesium body that's shockproof and submersible.
Peregrine XPs have an ergonomic design that incorporates a gel-filled grip and thumb pad embedded in the forest-green armor coating. Available in 8X or 10X, they have twist-up ocular barrels and profiled eyecups.