Canada
Astrobackyard is the YouTube channel of Trevor Jones, a Canadian astrophotographer who built a substantial following around a straightforward premise: you do not need a professional observatory or dark skies to photograph the cosmos.
Total Followers +0.2%
873K
Across YouTube, Instagram, TikTok
Primary Platform
YouTube
532K followers · 61% of audience
Engagement
4.4%
vs. 1.5% category median
Sponsorship Tier
Mid
Est. $3.6K–$9K / IG post
Trevor Jones reviewed the Askar SQA130 refractor on his official site, continuing his pattern of first-look reviews for new astrophotography gear releases.
After testing the ZWO Seestar S30 Pro extensively, Trevor published a comprehensive review calling it potentially the best smart telescope yet — a high-signal endorsement in the niche.
William Optics features Astrobackyard prominently as a collaborative partner, signalling a formal, ongoing brand relationship for gear reviews and co-promotion.
| Window | YouTube | TikTok | Combined | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last 7 days | +0 +0.0% | +54 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +54 |
| Last 30 days | +1K +0.2% | +412 +0.2% | +0 +0.0% | +1K |
| Last 90 days | +4K +0.8% | +1K +0.8% | +0 +0.0% | +5K |
| Last 365 days | +4K +0.8% | +1K +0.8% | +0 +0.0% | +5K |
Daily follower snapshots from CreatorDB's longitudinal index.
Astrobackyard is the YouTube channel of Trevor Jones, a Canadian astrophotographer who built a substantial following around a straightforward premise: you do not need a professional observatory or dark skies to photograph the cosmos. Operating primarily from suburban locations in Canada, Jones has spent the better part of a decade producing tutorials on capturing nebulae, galaxies, and star clusters using consumer-grade DSLR cameras, dedicated astronomy cameras, and increasingly, the new wave of smart telescopes. His channel name itself is a positioning statement — astrophotography as an approachable backyard hobby rather than an exclusive scientific pursuit. Content spans beginner guides on dealing with light pollution, detailed processing walkthroughs in software like PixInsight, and head-to-head comparisons of imaging setups, including recent reviews of compact smart telescopes such as the ZWO Seestar line.
The audience that has gathered around Astrobackyard skews heavily male and tilts older than the typical YouTube demographic, with a significant portion of viewers in the 35-and-up range — a profile consistent with a technically minded hobby that carries real equipment costs and requires patience. Engagement rates run well above category norms, signaling a genuinely invested community rather than passive viewership. Geographically, the audience is English-speaking and North America-led, with notable reach into the UK and India, reflecting the global appetite for accessible astronomy content. Brand partnerships in this niche naturally align with telescope manufacturers, camera accessories, and astronomy software — categories where Jones's credibility as a practitioner, rather than a media personality, is the core asset. As smart telescopes democratize deep-sky imaging further, his position at the intersection of traditional astrophotography expertise and emerging consumer hardware places him well to remain a reference point for a growing hobbyist base.
Astrobackyard reaches an audience concentrated in Canada primarily through YouTube, and is best activated via long-form YouTube integrations, Instagram Reels and Stories, TikTok branded content. As a science creator they map naturally to brands targeting that space. Engagement on YouTube runs around 4.4%, pointing to an audience suited to category-relevant, mid-funnel brand campaigns rather than pure-reach buys.
Benchmark estimates for a creator at Astrobackyard's tier (Mid, 873K combined followers, Canada). Pulled from CreatorDB's category benchmarks.
The CreatorDB Agency runs end-to-end influencer campaigns globally — shortlisting, outreach, contracting, and performance reporting. Talk to our team about building a campaign around creators in this niche.
The creator behind Astrobackyard is Trevor Jones, a Canadian astrophotographer. He uses the Astrobackyard brand across YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok to share tutorials, equipment reviews, and night-sky imaging sessions from his own backyard.
Yes — tackling light pollution is one of the core promises of Astrobackyard's channel. Trevor Jones explicitly teaches techniques for shooting nebulae, galaxies, and star clusters from suburban or urban backyards, not just remote dark-sky locations. His whole philosophy is that serious astrophotography doesn't require moving to the countryside.
Astrobackyard published a dedicated review of the Seestar S30 Pro, framing it as a strong contender for the best smart telescope currently available. He also filmed a first-light session with it to show real-world image results. Smart telescopes have become a growing focus of his recent content alongside traditional DSLR and dedicated astro-camera setups.
Astrobackyard made a direct comparison video shooting the same nebula with a DSLR, a dedicated astrophotography camera, and a smart telescope side by side. The video is one of his most practical resources because it shows real trade-offs in image quality, cost, and complexity rather than just listing specs. His general position is that a DSLR is a legitimate starting point for the hobby.
Yes — Astrobackyard posted content around the green comet that drew widespread public attention from the astronomy community, using the #greencomet hashtag across his social posts. Time-sensitive sky events like comets, solar eclipses, and full moons are part of his content mix alongside planned deep-sky imaging projects.
While nebulae, galaxies, and star clusters are the channel's primary focus, Astrobackyard also covers solar system targets. He has published detailed telescope footage of Mars and the Sun, as well as solar eclipse content, so the channel spans most areas of backyard astronomy rather than being strictly a deep-sky resource.
Astrobackyard markets itself directly as Astrophotography Made Simple, and the tutorials are structured to guide newcomers through equipment choices, camera settings, and image-processing technique. Whether someone is pointing a DSLR they already own at the sky or buying their first telescope, the channel covers the practical entry points without assuming prior knowledge.
Trevor Jones is based in Canada, though he doesn't specify a city publicly in his channel materials. The channel name itself reflects his philosophy that compelling astrophotography can be done from an ordinary residential backyard rather than a professional observatory or remote dark-sky site.
Astrobackyard's main platform is YouTube, where the bulk of his tutorial and review content lives and where he has built his largest audience. He is also active on Instagram for shorter tips and inspiration, and he maintains a TikTok presence under the handle @astrobackyard with Trevor Jones identified by name.
Astrobackyard's engagement on YouTube runs well above the typical benchmark for science and technology content — a meaningful signal for a channel in its follower tier. That above-average engagement reflects an audience made up of dedicated hobbyists and enthusiasts rather than casual passive viewers, which is consistent with the depth of a niche like astrophotography.
Stats (followers, engagement, audience demographics, growth) are pulled live from the CreatorDB API covering YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. Bio and FAQ content is AI-assisted; news items are sourced from cited public press at generation time. Read the full methodology →
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@astrobackyard · YouTube
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