Photography
Related: About this forumA stellar night at an international Dark Sky Park
Wednesday morning (May 1) I traveled to the wilds of northern-tier Pennsylvania for an overnight visit to Cherry Springs State Park, which was named the second international Dark Sky Park in the world in 2008. The park has been classified as a 2 on the Bortle Dark-Sky Scale, which means it has almost no light pollution from human sources. Cherry Springs attracts amateur astronomers and astrophotographers from around the world. I met several amateur astronomers setting up on the parks observation field before I picked a site and pitched my tent. A gregarious lot, the astronomers were happy to show off their telescopic rigs and share knowledge about the night sky.
The "Big Dipper"
Waning crescent moon rising
Dawn with the rising moon
CaliforniaPeggy
(152,071 posts)These are stellar, to coin a phrase . . .
Some of these are astonishing in their high quality and all are beautiful. I especially like the moon caught in the tree. And the next moon is also brilliant.
Major kudos!
Mousetoescamper
(5,138 posts)I was surprised the 14mm lens I used for the Milky Way and other sky shots did so well with the moon shots. I usually use my 55-250mm kit lens for the moon.
Diamond_Dog
(34,615 posts)Fabulous shots!