WHat I got, that is easier to handle, is a pair of deep-sky binoculars [super-light-gathering coating.]. Mounted on a tripod, they're much easier to aim, and have many uses besides. They're elephant-sized, but are tough, and you don't have the complexity of a sighting scope. On a cold night, you run out, look up, sight, steady it on the tripod, point it out, and get back in before you have hypothermia. You can see rings on Saturn, moons at Jupiter and you can spot nebulae and many more stars than your eyes can see. It's not so good for near objects like the moon, but it can spot a heron on a lake shore adequately well.