Okay, I'll admit to being a bit out there when it comes to being fascinated by viewing the night skies. I even invested in a top of the line amateur telescope and spent countless nights with my children observing the heavens. We rarely missed a night viewing the heavier meteor showers. Once they were grown and away from home, we all met in Nebraska to be in the umbra of the last total solar eclipse and vowed to travel again for the next. We be sky junkies so forgive me for sharing the link below. A comet, the name is the title of this thread, is making its round in our visible sky though this month. It will be difficult to see with the naked eye. It will take a clean dark sky and perhaps binoculars to see. It may seem silly to even try to see it but it will cost nothing but time. Time.... it was 50,000 years ago when it last passed our way. I'm hoping for clear sky Saturday the 21st which will be a new moon (no moon) and will go to my cabin away from the city lights to better my chances of a sighting.
https://www.space.com/comet-c2022-e3-ztf-visible-naked-eye-january-2023
https://www.space.com/comet-c2022-e3-ztf-visible-naked-eye-january-2023

That's often the way of astronomy in my area. The last total solar eclipse that was within a state's distance from me proved to be blemished by a cloudy sky. Fortunately, from my viewing location in the umbra path in Southern Nebraska, the clouds cleared over head just prior to the totality passing over and returned to cloudy just after the eclipse passed. I had planned to be in the umbra for over fifty years and was not disappointed but got lucky with the patchy clouds opening at the exact time I needed.