All things must pass. A bit of billion-year-old comet dust disintegrates above a decaying pioneer farm.
This was a lucky shot to be sure. Last night I returned to my favourite farmstead site to shoot a time-lapse sequence of the stars turning over the moonlit rustic buildings. I started shooting some test frames to get the settings right — the camera was on a motorized dolly to move it along a track for the next three hours, so you want to make sure you have all the settings right. I opened the shutter to start a test series, and whoosh! A bright meteor appeared. Right on time and in frame. That doesn’t happen very often!
However, shooting hundreds of shots for a time-lapse sequence, now a common practice among astrophotographers, does boost your chances of picking up a bright meteor on one of the frames. But having it appear nicely framed is often too much to ask. I was lucky. But … I was out with a camera aimed at the sky, and for getting good shots that’s the first requirement!
– Alan, April 26, 2013 / © 2013 Alan Dyer
Spectacular!!!
A very fortunate series of events Alan! I love the refraction happening in the clouds.
Nice one, Alan!
Lucky, yes, but as you say, you were ready for it.
Roy