Hi Jay. Here are directions I posted earlier (with a couple of corrections): Go to MapQuest and find map of Fairview, Utah (http://www.mapquest.com/maps?traffic=1&city=Fairview&state=UT). MapQuest will give you a little balloon with info on Fairview; turn that off. At toolbar on the top of the map turn off Traffic and select Aerial Map but leave the labels on. (The Aerial Map view is actually an aerial photo and will show terrain, vegetation and roads that don't show up on Google Maps or most paper maps.) Zoom in four clicks, then pan to the right (east) and follow SR31 until you see its intersection with SR264. Then pan down (due south) past two small lakes (called Fairview Lakes, but not labeled). SR31 will be headed southeast, but directly south of Fairview Lakes it makes a sort of shallow u-turn and briefly heads northeast before it then turns southeast again and continues in that direction toward Huntington Reservoir. Center the map on the bottom of that "u-turn" and zoom in two more clicks. The labels will now appear for Skyline Drive. You'll see where the southern part of Skyline Drive takes off, then somewhat east of that you'll see the junction for the northern part. Apparently the aerial photo was taken before the two snowmobiling parking areas were built, so they don't show up. Now pan north on Skyline Drive until you see an unlabeled road take off to the right (east). This is the road to the observing site, which is visible from Skyline Drive, about 1/4 mile off of the main road. If you zoom in all the way, you can even see three vehicles (probably trailers) parked on the "observing field." I misjudged a couple of distances in the directions I posted earlier. The distance between the junctions for the southern part of Skyline Drive and the northern part is probably only 1/2 mile or so. The distance on Skyline Drive from SR31 to the intersection with the dirt road is probably less than a mile. You can find the same site on Google Maps using the "satellite" tab for an aerial image. Google's aerial photo is newer and shows the two parking areas described above. Troy Davidson also sent the following: Latitude/Longitude for the site are: 39.632585,-111.295377 Here is a link to the exact spot on Google Maps: http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&hq=&ll=39.632585,-111.295377&spn=0.003099,0. 005279&t=h&z=18 Here's a link in Mapquest: http://www.mapquest.com/mq/6-rKawvezQ Incidentally, I re-read the August S&T article and noticed that they did mention the possibility of observing 100 Perseids per hour, so maybe I'm vindicated. Kim