FAQs

Things people ask us

Why we announce events about two weeks ahead, what happens under cloud, where we run camps, and a few other questions that come up regularly.

Frequently asked

Things people ask us

Why does RiSa Astronomy announce most events only two weeks ahead?+
South Indian weather is famously hard to predict beyond about ten or twelve days. Anyone who's lived through a Bangalore monsoon knows a clear morning can turn into a downpour by evening. Astronomy needs the sky to actually be visible, so committing to a date months in advance helps no one. We watch the forecast and announce most camps about two weeks before the date, when the prediction is reliable enough to plan against. It's a small change in how we schedule, but it's the difference between standing under stars and standing under cloud.
What if the weather is bad on my booking date?+
Two things happen. First, the camp still runs. We're educators first - the sky-show is one part of the lesson, not the whole thing. The science behind the seasons, the planets, why the nakshatras line up the way they do, how telescopes work and why the one in front of you is built the way it is - all of it works under any sky. Guests who came on cloudy nights have written to us afterwards saying they walked away with a great deal more than they expected. Second, if you'd rather not come at all because the forecast is poor, you get a full refund up to three days before. No fees, no fine print. We'd rather you stay home than show up unhappy.
Do you offer astronomy camps booked months in advance?+
No. South Indian weather cannot be honestly forecast that far ahead, so we don't pretend to. A camp sold four months out is really a booking for a place to stay - whether the stars actually come out is a separate question that nobody can answer that early. If you're booking astronomy anywhere, ours or otherwise, it's a good idea to ask what happens if the sky is closed for business that night, and what the refund policy looks like.
What is your cancellation policy?+
Full refund if you cancel up to three days before the camp - no fees, no fine print. After that we can't refund, since by then the tents, food, transport, and staff are already arranged. The three-day window is deliberate. We want you to feel free to back out if work, family, or weather pulls you a different direction. The astronomy will come around again.
Where in South India does RiSa Astronomy operate?+
We have three permanent locations, all within reach of Bangalore. Denkanikottai in Tamil Nadu is our flagship observatory, where we keep both a 16-inch and a 20-inch telescope - it's the closest serious dark-sky site to Bengaluru, about eighty kilometres south. Balyabane Camping in Coorg sits inside a working coffee estate. The Highranges Farmstay in Idukki, Kerala, gives us our southernmost sky. Beyond the camps, we conduct school astronomy programmes and corporate astronomy evenings across Bengaluru itself - including at venues in Whitefield, Indiranagar, and along Kanakapura Road, as well as further afield in Mysore.
Is RiSa Astronomy a Bangalore astronomy club?+
Yes. RiSa Astronomy is Bangalore's best-equipped astronomy club - founded in the city in 2016, run out of Bangalore, and home to some of the best minds in the field of astronomy education. Most of our work happens around Bangalore: weekend stargazing camps from dark-sky sites a couple of hours out, school astronomy programmes in Bangalore schools and across Karnataka, corporate astronomy evenings hosted in the city - Whitefield, Indiranagar, Koramangala, Kanakapura Road, anywhere a clear patch of sky is available. Our inventory includes Dobsonians up to twenty inches and dedicated solar telescopes that are hard to find elsewhere - but the work has always been about teaching first. If you're in Bangalore and looking for astronomy, you've found the right people.
What makes RiSa Astronomy different from a tour or telescope operator?+
We're educators first. Astronomy is something we want people - especially children - to actually learn, not just glance at through an eyepiece for ten minutes and forget. We've been doing this since 2016, when organised astronomy camps at this scale didn't really exist in our part of the country, and the format we built then is now roughly the template most other operators follow. Over the years we've also grown into the best-equipped astronomy outfit in India - some of the largest amateur telescopes in the country, dedicated solar telescopes that aren't easy to come across in Bangalore. But the equipment isn't the point. You don't pick a school by the height of its building. The same principle applies here.
I'm in Bangalore - can I actually see stars from the city?+
Honestly, no - and not for any reason special to Bangalore. Indian metros are now bright enough at night that the Milky Way is invisible from anywhere inside the city. The Moon and a couple of bright planets are still visible from a quiet rooftop, and you can spot satellites overhead. But for proper stargazing - constellations, deep-sky objects, the Milky Way's dust lanes - you need a dark site. The closest serious one to Bangalore is our observatory at Denkanikottai, about eighty kilometres south on the road towards Krishnagiri and Hosur. We run camps from there most weekends the weather permits.
Why are only one or two events listed on your site?+
We're constantly active - this isn't a quiet operation. The list looks short because we announce most events only about two weeks before they happen, once the forecast is reliable. The next one or two you see are confirmed; the ones beyond are not yet set. For a sense of how often we actually run, the past events list runs into the hundreds. We'd rather show a short, honest schedule of dates that will actually happen than a long one full of camps that might not.