Should stargazers also be cloudspotters? Everyone knows clouds are the first thing you see as soon as you get under a dark sky or buy a new telescope — it's almost guaranteed! However, by early July, I usually start actively looking for a special kind of noctilucent or "night shining" cloud — and they can be a magnificent sight to rival anything celestial.At its core, the search for these so-called "space clouds" is the flip side of the seemingly never-ending twilight in July in mid-northern latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. You wait all winter for tolerable temperatures, then summer arrives and the night sky never properly commits to darkness. At my latitude, the northern horizon glows all evening in early-to-mid July like somebody forgot to turn the sun off completely. Serious stargazing gets harder as even bright constellations seem washed out by lingering light.Cue noctilucent clouds. Peer at the northern sky during twilight between late May and August, and you may see strange silver-blue ripples. Delicate yet bright, they can look artificial — thin electric-blue strands stretched across twilight, with a texture like smoke. They seem entirely detached from the normal atmosphere.Noctilucent clouds are an accident. They are caused by sunlight striking ice crystals roughly 50 miles above Earth, near the edge of space, where ice crystals can only form under extremely cold conditions. They exist so high in the mesosphere — a layer of Earth's atmosphere above the stratosphere and below the thermosphere — that they continue to glow long after sunset, because the sun is still shining on them even though it has set as seen from beneath. Water vapor should not exist in the mesosphere, a dry layer on the edge of space. Yet under the right conditions, trace amounts of water vapor can freeze onto tiny particles, creating the ice crystals that make noctilucent clouds possible.While greenhouse gases warm the Earth's surface, they cool the mesosphere, allowing the increased moisture to freeze. There is growing evidence that changing upper-atmosphere conditions and increasing atmospheric moisture may be affecting how often noctilucent clouds appear and how far south they are seen.Perversely, noctilucent clouds arrive exactly during the brightest weeks of the year, when many stargazers are complaining that there is nothing worth observing. Cloudspotting on summer nights was probably not on your stargazing wishlist when you started, but for some of us, the chance of noctilucent clouds is all we have for a few weeks. See them once, and they'll fast become a seasonal delight you'll wait all year for.What's happening and when to lookNoctilucent clouds can appear just after sunset and just before sunrise. (Image credit: Alan Dyer/Stocktrek Images via Getty Images)If you want to search for noctilucent clouds this week, look north about an hour to two hours after sunset, or before sunrise, during deep twilight when the sky is dark except in the extreme north. July is prime season across northern latitudes, including much of the U.K., northern Europe, Canada and the northern U.S. You do not need total darkness. The key is a clear northern horizon. Noctilucent clouds usually appear low in the sky as pale blue, silver or sometimes faintly gold ripples and filaments. Beginners often mistake them for illuminated cirrus clouds at first, but ordinary clouds darken after sunset. Noctilucent clouds keep glowing with an oddly cold brightness.How and when I'm watching itNoctilucent clouds glow because they remain sunlit long after sunset. (Image credit: Svetlana Repnitskaya via Getty Images)You wouldn't typically go out on a special trip to see noctilucent clouds — it's too much of a long shot (though if they're sighted one night, going out the following night is a good idea). Instead, I have developed a habit of checking the northern horizon obsessively every clear July evening before bed. If I'm lucky, I'll pause if the twilight looks suspiciously textured. Noctilucent clouds don't hang around for long — they reward attentiveness more than planning. You don't need telescopes or even dark-adapted eyes, just a willingness to keep looking north during a season when many astronomy enthusiasts assume nothing interesting is happening.Stargazer's corner: July 10-17, 2026See a crescent moon and the Pleiades on July 11. (Image credit: Starry Night)The real challenge in July is not moonlight but the simple fact that darkness never fully settles at northern latitudes. This week, the moon wanes toward new, creating some fabulous opportunities for anyone crazy enough to get up very early. The prime moment is about 80 minutes before sunrise on July 11, when you can glimpse a 15%-illuminated waning crescent moon curled up to the Pleiades open cluster (M45), with Mars and red supergiant star Aldebaran below. For something more leisurely, look west after sunset on July 17 to see the exact opposite sight — a 15%-illuminated waxing crescent moon close to Venus. Put a telescope on Venus itself, and you'll see that it's now a 60%-lit gibbous shape as it gets closer to Earth.Constellation of the week: CassiopeiaFind the W-shape of the constellation Cassiopeia. (Image credit: E. Slawik/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani)Cassiopeia becomes especially useful during the noctilucent cloud season because it remains visible above the northern horizon throughout summer twilight. It's a familiar W-shape that cuts through even bright skies surprisingly well. It's a circumpolar constellation, so it always sits opposite the Big Dipper, forming two distinctive shapes permanently wheeling around Polaris, the North Star.My latest stargazing obsessionLook for reflections of stars in puddles. (Image credit: Jamie Carter)I'm always on the lookout for puddles. The dark skies coming this week will be a fabulous time to photograph nightscapes, including the Milky Way, but composition is everything. The night sky reflected in still water can look more dramatic than the sky itself because reflections compress and simplify structure. If I'm under a dark sky (or even in twilight) with a camera, I actively search for reflective surfaces — parked car roofs, wet pavements, ponds and puddles. Stargazing teaches you that observing is not always about pointing higher into the sky. It's often just as much about noticing how Earth participates in the view.