It forms an almost equilateral triangle with two stars in Perseus. Follow a line from two stars in Cassiopeia to find it. Comet is at the lower left of the triangle. Seems like tonight it was a little less equilateral, more isosceles than last night, so slight motion can be detected from night to night. With sharp vision you can tell it`s fuzzy, and binoculars of even 7x help a lot. Best around 2-4 hours after sunset, high in the northeast sky, before the moon rises, but it`s waning and latening. Astronomy websites are collecting lots of amateur photos, such as http://www.skyandtelescope.com and also http://www.spaceweather.com 73, Glenn Hauser, OK
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