I can see that you're very committed to it. That is awesome. I've seen too many people via the club that I'm in who get frustrated with their telescope and leave the hobby.
The two most common things we see in the hobby, while some people like family members do mean well, end up gifting cheap inadequate scopes with wobbly mounts, usually with marketing focusing on power, and those are the kind of scopes that end up frustrating the most. The other issue we often see are newcomers coming into the hobby and buying expensive advanced computer-controlled scopes right off the bat, without learning the sky before hand, and needing help to set up their scopes because they haven't ended up learning the basics enough to set them up. Seriously, I've lost count how many times I've heard people needing help getting their scopes polar aligned.
One option most don't even realize they have is to make their own telescope. I belong to a telescope making club that has been around since the 1920's. They got into telescope making back then because the cost of commercial telescopes were prohibitively expensive, and it meant most people would have to mortage their houses, and most in town were working at a metalworks factory. They ground their own mirrors, held classes, and eventually their club was formed as it was found there was quite a bit of interest in keeping it going. The club recently celebrated its 100th year, and still puts on its yearly convention where people come from all over to display telescopes they've built. It's a craft that is highly rewarding, as you essentially make your own primary mirror and the scope itself entirely to the specifications you want. And by the end of the project, you have yourself a scope that you can view the stars and planets with that you've built yourself. There is something very grounding about that.
I don't consider myself tall, and most commercial scopes I find too tall, and I always have issues looking through eyepieces as a result. When it came time to building a scope of my own, I built it to my own specifications, as something that would be sitting closer to the ground, but also something perfectly usable for taller people as well.
I have been into the hobby for probably 15 years now, if not more. I am not avid or super knowledgable with it. For me, it mostly a solitary thing. Getting out at night to look at the planets and stars is an enjoyable thing to do. I would much rather be doing that then sitting behind a computer screen.
Now that the weather is cleared up a bit. Maybe tomorrow I'll get some good pictures of the Sun and share them here.
One thing I don't like about Refractor scopes is how they mirror the image you are looking at, but the best part is - no maintenance. With the reflector scopes, you have to clean the mirrors. I never did with the reflector scopes I did since I was afraid of breaking or damaging them somehow, so I never took them apart.


