PUC, Grandview is a good suggestion -- we have been up there for the August meteors, and there were friendly folks with very big telescopes all around us -- my boys enjoyed looking at the planets. There was a little light pollution from Bishop and Big Pine -- not much.
Mahogany may be too rugged for our trailer -- the other problem with the Death Valley area is that, amazingly, there is noticeable light pollution from Las Vegas. Having been to deepest Utah, I am spoiled -- I really want dark, dark, dark sky.
We found that hot chocolate was the key to getting small children interested in the stars. Your three kids are in the prime years for this activity -- big enough to stay awake, young enough to be interested in the stars.
I also found that I could hold their interest for a while by talking to them about the origins of the meteors (the comet), the origins of the comet (the Oort Cloud), the origins of the solar system, the odd fact that the moon and the planets are in the same plane (the "accretion disk"), etc. If they were still awake, we would talk about the universe, the big bang, the red shift, and so forth. All of this can be discussed in "kid friendly" terms, by posing questions to them.
They are both grown up now -- I miss those innocent days. But not their teenage years.
๐
2012 Fun Finder X-139 "Boondock Style" (axle-flipped and extra insulation)
2013 Toyota Tacoma Off-Road (semi-beefy tires and components)
Our trips -- pix and textAbout our trailer"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single list."