Curious about how the Geminid meteor shower was going, I stepped
outdoors at around 10:00 last night. In the five to 10 minutes I stood
in the cold air, I spotted three bright meteors and that's under our
light-polluted suburban skies! Reports were coming in from other areas
of North America remarking on the quality of this year's crop of
meteors. And so, despite my fatigue, I set out with camera and tripod
for points farther away from city lights. A dark parking spot along a
road in Hinckley looked mighty good: there was no ambient light and I
was south of a layer of thin, city-lit clouds. Not long after I'd set
up, a car drove up, its lights bothering me. The car pulled into a
nearby parking spot and the driver started a conversation. I thought it
might be a policeman about to tell me to move along or a not-so-nice
person out to pester me or worse! Turns out it was another would-be
meteor watcher/photographer seeking darkness and a bit of reassuring
companionship. This was good. So there we stood, out in the cold, quiet
darkness comparing notes and experiences, snapping shutters, spotting a
meteor here and another there. Now and again a sound was heard coming
from the woods -- deer? Occasionally commotion came from the direction
of the lake -- ducks and geese. Not creepy if you aren't alone.
Photographic efforts continued. Thing is, if your camera doesn't happen
to be aimed at the spot where a meteor zips by, you're not going to get a
picture of it ... no matter how bright it was. I saw a Geminid cover
half the sky, in the portion of the sky opposite where my camera was
aimed. My companion and I suffered the same frustrations ... aimed at
the wrong space of sky at the wrong time to record bright streaks. So
after maybe an hour, with cold feet and 117 photo exposures done, I said
goodnight and we headed in our separate directions. I had seen more "falling stars" than I've seen in a good long time. Although I
got no meteor images it was a beautiful night. From the southern
horizon, up, was the brilliant star Sirius, then the grand constellation
Orion, and up from there was planet Jupiter floating just above the
Hyades star cluster. Above them all (though not in the photo I am
displaying here) was the lovely Pleiades star cluster. Those pesky thin
clouds, illuminated by street lights, formed patterns in the sky even
where they did not completely cover it. That was my little midnight
meteor-chasing adventure.
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