The Cosmic Campground lies just off a two-lane highway in New Mexico's largest and mostly rural county, where traffic lights don't exist and the US Census counts half a person per square mile.
"The thing of it is you can see a 360 [degree view] here. You can see the last star of the Big Dipper come up over the edge of the Gila Wilderness," says Annie Grauer, a writer who's been married to an astronomer for the past 40 years.
She and her husband, Al Grauer, were part of the team effort that created the Cosmic Campground. The couple traveled to a spot in the Gila National Forest and used special instruments to measure the darkness of the sky.
"We would come about once a week and we did that for about three months or four months," she says. They sent the data to the International Dark Sky Association, a group dedicated to protecting places with little or no light pollution. IDA reviewed the data and in January designated the site as a dark sky sanctuary, only the second in the world. The other is in the Elqui Valley of northern Chile.
“This sky is so dark and there are so many stars up there, it's actually lighter than you would imagine," Grauer says. "One night we were up here and … I was scared by my own shadow. I could see my shadow by starlight.”
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On a recent summer afternoon, a crowd of amateur astronomers and science nerds gathered at the Cosmic Campground to celebrate the sanctuary designation.
Next to the potluck table, Deborah Calkins and her son Michael wrapped red cellophane on a flashlight to help dim its intensity at night.
“We got our star wheels, we got our flashlights, I think we’re ready for sunset," she says.
Michael had just gotten a telescope for his 12th birthday. He’d wanted one ever since he saw the International Space Station fly over his house in Silver City, just an hour south of the campground.
“I like science and I'm interested in the stars," he says.
After sunset the Cosmic Campground lies beneath a twinkling canopy of stars. Al Grauer, the astronomer, sets up his telescope and invites fellow campers to take a peek at Saturn.
One woman likens the ringed planet to a UFO.
Nearby, Cindy Neely, a retired nurse, helps her 3-year-old granddaughter, Veda Werber, on to a stool so she could peer into the family telescope. Werber excitedly counts Jupiter's moons out loud.
For Grauer and his wife these are the moments that make their efforts worthwhile. They hope to spread the word about the Cosmic Campground to kids in urban areas via their website and a podcast called "Travelers in the Night."
“Astronomy has ignited kids’ imaginations and humans’ imagination from the beginning," Grauer says. "So what's the price of imagination? Where does the next generation of poets and scientists and engineers … come from?”
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