With my 60D or astro-modified 40D, I find I can manually focus using a bright star and 10x magnification in LiveView. At Joshua Tree you should also be able to get some wonderful time lapses. My biggest blunders included not realizing I'd moved the focus ring and shooting a wonderfully OOF sequence. I *can't* recommend that! 20-30 seconds at 1600ISO should work fine as a starting point. If you're taking individual shots, long exposure noise reduction can help, but it eats up valuable dark sky time. Be sure to post some of your images after your trip! (meaning....I'm really interested in how that RokSamBow 14mm performs. I have the Tokina 11-16, but that lens interests me.)
FWIW, these are a couple of guides I threw together for my astronomy club friends, for some simple prettification of astro images. More for telephoto/telescope shots but I've used them for wide field shots in more light polluted areas. Here is a sample of the difference taken 10 years ago on like the third day after I bought a Digital Rebel (300D).
Before: http://www.pbase.com/emagowan/image/21459259
After: http://www.pbase.com/image/21459102
http://www.pbase.com/emagowan/processing
http://www.pbase.com/emagowan/processing_with_gimp
FWIW, these are a couple of guides I threw together for my astronomy club friends, for some simple prettification of astro images. More for telephoto/telescope shots but I've used them for wide field shots in more light polluted areas. Here is a sample of the difference taken 10 years ago on like the third day after I bought a Digital Rebel (300D).
Before: http://www.pbase.com/emagowan/image/21459259
After: http://www.pbase.com/image/21459102
http://www.pbase.com/emagowan/processing
http://www.pbase.com/emagowan/processing_with_gimp
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