Most photographers go home after sunset. But that’s when the fun begins…
I take out my lights and tripods, and head for locations I scouted during the day. It may be a prominent physical feature like New Mexico’s Ventana Arch, or an abandoned building like the Magdelena Tire Service or 1000 year old Chetro Ketl ruin in Chaco Canyon. I use Luminos, Stellarium and PhotoPills to find out when and where the Milky Way will rise over that prominent feature or building. I also use Astropheric to find cloud-free viewing sites with good seeing, and Lightpollutionmap to find sites away from urban (and not so urban) light pollution.
Either way, I light and expose. Sometimes the results are very controllable, other times more random. But the pictures are going to be interesting, and the shooting is always fun.
1941 Buick and winter Milky Way, Death Valley
Pueblo Bonito by headlight
Milky Way rising over Pueblo Bonito, Chaco Canyon
Lit up at Overland Bank with Cook Bank background, Rhyolite, Nevada
Orb, fire trail and lightning strike
Lunar eclipse eye
Lunar eclipse - this lasted almost 30 minutes, unlike a fast-moving solar eclpise.
Total solar eclipse, August 2017, Idaho - a temporary nightscape in broad daylight.
Burning the midnight oil at Magdalena Tire Repair
Looking into commercial and farm tires
Magdalena Tire Repair
Light orb alien at Pueblo Bonito, Chaco Canyon
Twins under the moon
RVing under the stars
Chetro Ketl balcony, Chaco Canyon
Winter starfield, Pagosa Springs
South of Ventana Arch, El Malpais
Halloween eyes
Kin Kletso ruin and moon, Chaco Canyon
Light orb and Milky Way, Chaco Canyon
Eclipse Diamond Ring - Llano, TX, April 2024
Courthouse eclipse phases, Llano TX, 2024