A Brief History of The Cederberg Observatory

In the early 1980’s a British astronomer named Peter Mack, who was working for the SAAO (South African Astronomical Observatory), visited the Cederberg and saw its potential as a base for an amateur observatory. He obtained the use of a piece of land on the farm Dwars Rivier, courtesy of the then owner, Pollie Nieuwoudt, and built the first piers for telescopes there in 1984. A storeroom and a dome were constructed early in 1986 and the site was used for observations of Halley’s Comet later that year.

In 1988 Peter Mack created a partnership with five amateur astronomers from Cape Town and a constitution was drawn up officially establishing the Cederberg Observatory. The ‘first generation’ astronomers where then, Peter Mack, Chris Forder, Wayne Trow, Bill Hollenbach, Martin Lyons and Martin Fuller.

An accommodation block with cooking facilities was completed in 1989 and subsequent work at the site has seen the erection of an ablution block, a storeroom, a second dormitory and a roll-off roof structure to house a 12” telescope. As a final luxury, Eskom provided power in the mid 90’s, rendering redundant the old solar panels, batteries and a rather noisy generator.

As partners left or retired to greener pastures, new partners were brought on board and included Steve Klein, Cliff Turk and Geff Groom. Currently the partners are, Chris Forder, Wayne Trow, Cliff Turk, Malcom Cerfonteyn, Peter Schonu , Dany Du Duprez, Geff Groom (dormant) and Gerhard Pool (standing in for Geff Groom).

Images and text courtesy of Cederberg Astronomical Observatory http://www.cederbergobs.org.za

Building a giant telescope with the Guys from TelescopeShop. A 585mm mirror Equatorially Fork Mounted, weighing of over a ton.

This is the biggest home made scope in South Africa. Took over 3 years to make, from grinding and polishing own mirror to completion.

An achievement never to be equalled again !! The reason, there is no more 40mm glass left to make one...

A telescope that size, makes the planets too bright and galaxies look like photographs.

Glad I built it, for experience, but will never make another one that size.

It takes two or three people to operate.