You can see Saturn with a telescope now; in the northern hemisphere, Saturn rises about midnight and is high in the sky by midnight.
Venus is smallest of Neptune, Venus, Saturn, or Uranus.
If you have a decent sized telescope, Saturn with its rings is the prettiest. Jupiter is also pretty in a slightly smaller telescope. Without a telescope Venus is pretty when it is bright, hanging over the horizon before sunrise or after sunset. Another candidate is Mars, very red.
Venus is the brightest light in the sky except for the Sun and moon when it is out. Also, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn are readily visible in the night sky. Mercury is visible, but only right before sunrise or after sunset.
The Earth is definitely the #1 easiest. Next in line would be Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Mercury. Each of those is visible without a telescope, so you'd know exactly where to point your telescope by seeing the planet with your eye first. The brightest planet that you do need a telescope to see is Uranus. So you definitely won't miss it when you're pointed at it, but you need to know where to point.
Saturn is the largest planet between the two. It is the second largest planet in our solar system, after Jupiter. Venus is smaller than Earth and significantly smaller than Saturn.
Jupiter is the outer planet that can be seen from Earth without the aid of a telescope. It is the fourth-brightest object in the sky after the Sun, Moon, and Venus, making it easily visible to the naked eye.
Venus is one of the planets that is visible without a telescope. The planet has been known since antiquity. Galileo was the first astronomer to study Venus through a telescope.
Venus is smallest of Neptune, Venus, Saturn, or Uranus.
If you have a decent sized telescope, Saturn with its rings is the prettiest. Jupiter is also pretty in a slightly smaller telescope. Without a telescope Venus is pretty when it is bright, hanging over the horizon before sunrise or after sunset. Another candidate is Mars, very red.
Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn are easily visible in the sky without a telescope or binoculars, if you know when and where to look. That information is often included on the weather page of the local newspaper.
Venus is the brightest light in the sky except for the Sun and moon when it is out. Also, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn are readily visible in the night sky. Mercury is visible, but only right before sunrise or after sunset.
Saturn, since Venus has no moons
The Earth is definitely the #1 easiest. Next in line would be Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. Each of those is visible without a telescope, so you'd know exactly where to point your telescope by seeing the planet with your eye first. The brightest planet that you do need a telescope to see is Uranus. So you definitely won't miss it when you're pointed at it, but you need to know where to point.
The Earth is definitely the #1 easiest. Next in line would be Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Mercury. Each of those is visible without a telescope, so you'd know exactly where to point your telescope by seeing the planet with your eye first. The brightest planet that you do need a telescope to see is Uranus. So you definitely won't miss it when you're pointed at it, but you need to know where to point.
Venus
Saturn is the largest planet between the two. It is the second largest planet in our solar system, after Jupiter. Venus is smaller than Earth and significantly smaller than Saturn.
Saturn with 61. Venus doesn't have any moons