I treated myself to a new lens recently (Canon 16-35mm F2.

Last night the weather forecast was good, and despite it being not far off a full moon, the moonrise wasn't until gone midnight so I thought I'd dash out to a new location I found just NW of Chipping Norton to give it a first try out and test some settings. The best time of year for the milky way is June/July so I knew I wouldn't get great images last night but it was a good start on where to be on the settings.
I set the camera up on my tripod in portrait mode to get the most sky possible and over the next couple of hours tried out some angles while it was still just about light.

which gives me this

.....then sit around for about an hour until it gets dark enough to see the stars.....
Here's Orion which was very prominent in the south last night with the characteristic three stars in a line for his belt, the slightly orangy glow of betelgeuse for the top left of the 'square' and sirius off to the left of the picture.

In order to see the cloud of the Milky Way you have to process the RAW images a LOT! Next time I go, another possibility is to take a series of 10 or 20 in the same place and stack them.
After a lot of fiddling, I managed to get these


and because it loops over the whole sky, I got some of it behind the trees to the north as well

All in all, despite being freezing!!!, it was quite a productive night.
Mostly these were ISO 1600, F2.8 and between 20 and 30 second exposures.
The amazing thing is that you only see that orange glow on the long exposure. You can't see it with the naked eye. That's coming from Swindon which is 30 miles away! The glow on the right of the north image is from Banbury about 12 miles away.
So I plan to go in to Wales for an attempt later in the year. I have a friend who lives on the far side of Swansea so to the south is just 25 miles of Bristol Channel darkness and to the north is 100 miles of Welsh mountains. My parents live in the north so a little 10 miles trip in to the hills there should be a good spot as well.
Not a bad start though.