Welcome to Physics Forums jackpot337!
Welcome to Physics Forums Wes Hughes!
There are indeed neutrino 'telescopes', for example
AMANDA. However, they don't operate like your backyard Meade or Celestron one, nor like the http://xmm.vilspa.esa.es/external/xmm_user_support/documentation/technical/Mirrors/index.shtml X-ray telescope, nor yet the
Very Large Array radio telescope, nor even http://astro.estec.esa.nl/Integral/integ_payload.html , a gamma-ray telescope. Perhaps the closest other telescopes come to neutrino telescopes would be
CANGAROO, or the
Pierre Auger Observatory. A big difference between AMANDA (etc) and all the above telescopes is that AMANDA looks downwards; it only 'observes' neutrinos that have traveled through the Earth.
However, sadly, none of the neutrino telescopes will be able to 'see' neutrinos such as those which Timothy Ferris seems to be referring to (what is the name of the book by the way?).
Perhaps you've heard of the
Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (CMBR)? This is photons emitted when matter and radiation 'decoupled', approx 300,000 years after the Big Bang; its temperature - as we measure it today - is ~2.7K. A similar thing happened to neutrinos, much earlier (seconds after the BB, rather than 100k years), so if we could 'see' this cosmic neutrino background, we'd get some idea of what the universe was like around 1 second after the BB. Trouble is, there's currently no known way to detect these relic (or 'relict', or 'remnant') neutrinos.
You may find this
CERN article - on a workshop on the physics of relic neutrinos- interesting. Note that our understanding of neutrinos has moved on a bit since this workshop.