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Here is how to view one of the brightest meteor showers from Saskatchewan

Make the most of this spellbinding spectacle with up to 80 shooting stars an hour.
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The Perseid meteor shower will peak in Saskatchewan skies on Aug. 12 and Aug. 13, 2021. Here are some helpful tips on how to view the dazzling event.

Ready to wish upon a shooting star?

What if you could wish on dozens of them in one celestial tour de force?

According to experts, this month will offer prime viewing conditions in Saskatchewan for one of the best meteor showers of the year. 

The Perseid meteor shower never fails to offer numerous, bright shooting stars for a breathtaking summer display. Best of all, the Perseid shower is one of the easiest to view from the Northern Hemisphere.  

Each year, the Perseids are viewable as Earth passes through "the path of  from July 17 to Aug. 24," explained . 

Marley Leacock, an astronomer at the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre in Vancouver, told  that the Perseid meteors will appear to come from the north-northeast part of the sky. 

"If you find the constellation Cassiopeia, just head a bit to the right, and you've found Perseus!" she said.

The meteors can appear to come out of the constellation Perseus, which is why they call them the Perseids, added Leacock. 

Meteors can streak across the sky in all directions, however, so the radiant is not vitally important for viewing. "Looking up and in a general northern direction is fine," she said. 

Perseid meteor shower to peak mid-month

The shower will peak on Aug.12 and Aug. 13. When the sky is darkest – in the darkest hours after midnight – up to "50 to 80 meteors per hour can streak across the sky," according to the  And in the nights leading up to the peak, an increasing number of shooting stars will become visible, too. 

Leacock noted that that the shower's radiant is the highest in the sky during pre-dawn hours and there is less atmosphere to impact viewing. "Additionally, this year the Moon is just coming out of New Moon and heading towards First Quarter during the peak nights of the shower, so there is less light in the sky."

Local stargazers should also try to get out of the city where light pollution may diminish the display's brightness. From there, Leacock said you should lie on your back and look to the north. 

But don't make the astral outing a gaze-and-go kind of affair. 

"Give yourself about an hour of viewing time," she said. "Meteors come in bursts, and then it will be pretty quiet until the next one."

Learn more about the . 

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