 The trip around the Triangle is a telescope tour your visitors can take as they visit the telescopes at a public star party. The Summer Triangle has a wealth of sights to show your visitors. There's the three stars marking the Triangle Asterism, the Ring Nebula, the Double Double in Lyra, and the band of the Milky Way running down the middle of the Triangle. And don't forget the ever-popular blue and yellow star, Albirio. There is also the actual area of the sky where the Kepler mission will be monitoring 100,000 stars continuously for at least four years looking for planetary transits. In the activity, you will find a set of trip around the Triangle guides to hand to your visitors. This is how to fold it. There's room on the back for your club information. The master for this is in the manual so that you can personalize it for your club information and make as many copies as you wish. There's also a set of pencils so your visitors can check off what they saw. The participating club members at the telescopes should each have a copy of the guide so that they know what their visitors are referring to. You can open this up and say to your visitors, here are all the sites you might have a chance to see. Some they can see with just their eyes, no telescope needed. For others, they'll need binoculars, or a telescope operator can show them the object. Tell your visitors to just ask each telescope operator whether their object is on the trip list. Be sure to show your visitors the area where the NASA's Kepler mission will be searching for Earth-sized planets around other stars. Just hold your fist out at arm's length. The area of the sky Kepler will be monitoring is a little bigger than your fist.