Contains:  Extremely wide field
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The Southern Summer Milky Way at Moonrise, GL Walpole

The Southern Summer Milky Way at Moonrise

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The Southern Summer Milky Way at Moonrise, GL Walpole

The Southern Summer Milky Way at Moonrise

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Description

Back in January this year, I took a chance recently and went out shooting in a narrow 90 minute window between astronomic twilight and moonrise. Not an ideal timeframe, but with recent weather difficulties I was keen to take what I could get. Unfortunately, I wasted the first 60 minutes troubleshooting driver issues with my guide camera (the initial plan was to shot a long focal length view of Eta Carinae). After getting very frustrated, I gave up on the tracker and opted for a much simpler approach for the remaining time before moonrise.

I decided to go with the static tripod landscape astrophoto shot below. Its 20 minutes of sky exposures just before moonrise, and then 7 minutes of foreground exposures as the moon started rising. Whilst it wasn’t the initial plan, I’m still very happy with the final result.

I think it’s a nice change from the usual landscape astro photos we all shot targeting the milky way core.

It turned out well enough that I will actively seek out more chances to shoot these photos just before/after moonrise!

Pentax KP (with Astrotracer enabled) and a Sigma 18-35mm f1.8, at 35mm FoV
Sky is 24 x 50 second, Foreground is 5 x 90 second.

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The Southern Summer Milky Way at Moonrise, GL Walpole