As a person who has spent a whole lot of time looking at the night sky ...
Don't overlook using plain old 10x50 binoculars. I'm not talking expensive either, the WallyWorld variety work fine for beginners. They're cheaper, much simpler to point than a telescope, easier to store & transport, more comfortable to use on long gazing sessions and still gather enough light to help a great deal. I have a 4.5" reflector with all the bells & whistles, but seem to grab the binoculars unless I have a real dim or difficult to find target in mind for the evening. You will also find yourself reaching for the binoculars in the daytime to watch wildlife and so on.
Your magnification/light gathering experience with these will be very similar to what Galileo had with his telescopes. In good conditions (no light pollution) I can see the four Galilean moons around Jupiter (check back every few hours and notice how they move), Saturn's rings (right now they're about edgewise ... really hard to see) and the crescent shape of Venus and Mercury (these planets go through phases like the moon.) Also, I enjoy the moon during it's crescent and gibbous phases more than a full moon because the shadows add immense detail that isn't there during a full moon.
Photos are more difficult. The picture that Dean posted is impressive considering how it was done. I have had better luck with film cameras than digital. Loonnnnnggg exposures and a tripod are necessary for most things and a motor drive is almost a necessity when photographing planetary nebulae, the milky way, star clusters, comets and so on unless you want to capture star-trails, meteor showers, satellite and ISS passes, iridium flares, (things that you want to show as a streak in the image anyway.)
I use the website
http://www.heavens-above.com to plan my targets for the evening. There's lots of good accurate information there and accounts are free. It also works for any location worldwide. Have accurate latitude and longitude ready for your viewing site and program it in to see times and direction for seeing satellites, iridium flares (very exciting as they only last for a few seconds), and International Space Station passes. I also use Distant Suns (favorite for planets, stars), GoSatWatch (favorite for satellites - remember to update the data when you have access to WiFi), Star Walk, Starmap Pro, and Moon Globe apps on an iPod Touch to find objects in the sky.
Remember to be safe ... through magnification, the sun will blind you instantly.