Fifteen minutes west of Mudgee, a working observatory built from scratch by its owner over more than four decades of amateur astronomy sits away from the town's lights. Sessions combine a planetarium show with guided telescope viewing, run by the same person who built the facility — domes, mounts and all — so questions get answered by someone who has spent a working life at the eyepiece rather than reciting a script. Session times shift with the season and are confirmed at booking, working around moonrise and the dark-sky window each night offers. It's a hands-on, personal introduction to the night sky rather than a polished tourist show, better suited to genuinely curious visitors than to young children — under-sixes aren't recommended, and the grounds don't take dogs. For anyone spending a night in Mudgee wine country, it's a distinctive way to close out the evening under some of the clearest skies in the central tablelands.