Whoo Hoo.
We saw it too. Mrs. Bean and myself. Unfortunately it was a different pass. Ours was the 22:27 pass that was further north. Yours was to far south for us to view.
It was a good view here though. There was a cloud haze moving in that concerned me but at zero hour there was a break in the path that the station took directly through the center of the dipper in then up and across the top of the North Star.
I hope to watch again tonight. for our 9:14 pass It looks like it will be dimly visible to you with a max altitude of 30 for you at the same time.
Bernd das Brot's Pass| Date | | Starts | Max. altitude | Ends |
| Time | Alt. | Az. | Time | Alt. | Az. | Time | Alt. | Az. |
| 10 Jul | -1.1 | 21:13:56 | 10 | W | 21:16:34 | 30 | NNW | 21:19:13 | 10 | NNE |
TheBeanTeam's Pass| 10 Jul | -3.4 | 21:14:15 | 10 | SW | 21:17:10 | 67 | SE | 21:20:05 | 10 | ENE |
All of this is moot for us though. I just went and read the requirements. This pass does not meet them.
45 degrees for all viewers.
Each of us would need to have a waymarker to the east of us at a pass to ever get a waymark. The north south thing puts us out of the running when it comes to the altitude. unless we both get a 45 degree pass at some point.
This from the category.
"Any waymark (sighting) in this "catch the ISS" category must have been
a successful multiplayer sighting of the ISS as it passed above a
certain required altitude in degrees above each person's horizon. Each
player must have been at least 293 miles (472 km) apart."
" For evening passes it’s usually better to look for someone west of you rather than east of you."
This works against us because there is no one west of west. Maybe someone in Hawaii....someday...with just the right angle of pass.