Change Is Hard

…but change is certain.

Look to the sky

50 Comments

We have been so lucky, up here in Michigan, (and sometimes all the way down to Georgia!) to be able to see the Northern Lights quite frequently this past summer and into fall.

May 2024, somewhere in Michigan farm country.

Of course even if the lights are dancing, the weather doesn’t always cooperate. Lots of evenings the skies are obstructed with clouds and you can only dream about what might be happening up there.

May 10, 2024.

And of course you have to actually go outside to a dark place to see them. And even then you mostly can’t see them with your naked eyes, you need your phone or a camera to get a better view.

Amazing color in May.

In May there was a huge aurora storm above us and I was lucky enough to take my sister and head north to see them. We ended up on a random dirt road in front of a farmer’s house shooting the amazing lights as they danced across the sky.

More of the May experience.

Last weekend there was some evidence that a big light storm would be arriving, but night after night nothing happened. Then Wednesday night, with clouds rolling in, people in my general area were starting to post pictures they’d taken from their own yards of colorful northern lights.

I leapt out of bed, and headed to my own back yard. There were clouds, but enough open spaces that I saw this.

October 6, from my yard looking over my neighbor’s house.

It wasn’t beautiful, no special location, the lights of my neighbor’s house spread across the image. But I saw them. I saw them in my own backyard without driving across the state.

I was thrilled.

I was especially thrilled because I took that shot with my phone, and had only just learned how to use my phone at night. My regular camera had been shipped back to Nikon as a trade-in for a new version of the Z series.

Thursday of last week my new camera arrived, and coincidently notices of potential northen lights grew louder and louder as the day went on.

I tried to learn all the differences between the new camera and what I was used to using. And when it got dark I went over to Katie’s park and set up near her pond.

I was hoping for color reflected in the pond…but a layer of invasive plants covered the surface of the water.

I was not disappointed. There was a definite pink tinge to the northern sky.

It wasn’t always bright, but it was pretty and surrounded the Big Dipper.

There were obnoxious lights in the parking lot, and I lowered my tripod as low as I could to minimize the light pollution.

But mostly I just watched the sky. As my eyes adjusted I could tell the lights were there, but I couldn’t see much. Sometimes I could see a few pillars of light.

Sometimes the colors obscured the stars.

And once I turned the camera over to the east a bit, because I thought maybe something was there. But looking on the back of the camera, I didn’t see anything interesting, so I turned it back to the pond.

See that green waving at me from over there on the right?

I was wrong. There were actually green waves over there, but I didn’t see them until I processed the images days later.

I was out there from 8 until shortly after 9. I wasn’t prepared with hand warmers, or a hat or gloves. You wouldn’t have thought you’d need them, but on this clear night as the moon came up behind me, the air chilled.

The lights began to fad. I didn’t realize the green was ramping up.

By 9 I was cold and my husband and I ambled back to the car under the fading colors that still filled the sky. I went to bed and dreamed about starry nights and dancing lights. In the morning I found out that Mother Nature has a sense of humor, because she put up a magnificent light show with curtains of color that started about 10. While I was sleeping.

Yep.

In order to really see the northern lights you need to prepare, take warm clothes, bring extra batteries, some snacks, a chair and your good camera and on top of all that, hope for clear skies.

When I got home I went out back and took a picture of the moon. Because it was beautiful too.

And if all that lines up…you’re gonna see a real show!

I’m not disappointed, I was so happy to be out there at all. I’m thrilled to have had the experience and to share it with my husband.

Right overhead, in May.

But I’m secretly hoping to get one more chance this season.

Author: dawnkinster

I'm a long time banker having worked in banks since the age of 17. I took a break when I turned 50 and went back to school. I graduated right when the economy took a turn for the worst and after a year of library work found myself unemployed. I was lucky that my previous bank employer wanted me back. So here I am again, a long time banker. Change is hard.

50 thoughts on “Look to the sky

  1. Wow, lucky you! We have not been able to see a thing. Nice photos.

    Like

    • It’s hard when Facebook fills up with images and you didn’t get to see any in person. I feel lucky I saw them 2.5 times! Most of the times I missed them it was because I just didn’t get up and go somewhere.

      Like

  2. Dawn, I’m thrilled you saw the Northern Lights and are sharing them with us! The TV folks said we *might* be able to see them here, too, but I figured there’d be no way with all the light pollution around here. And packing the Monk in the car — or leaving him behind — didn’t feel acceptable. So I have to content myself with seeing them through other people’s lenses — and your photos are splendid!

    Like

    • May and last week’s storm were very strong so you might have been able if you just got away from direct light…but you’d still need a camera. Cell phones work these days! But I know what you mean, it sometimes just doesn’t make sense to rush out into the dark.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Gorgeous shots! Love the moon one!

    Like

  4. Smiles, smiles, smiles!

    Like

  5. So beautiful! I wondered if you caught any of the light shows. We missed the last one here because we weren’t paying attention (didn’t realize it was coming). We did get to see the comet last night. That was exciting. Not as glorious as northern lights, but beautiful in its own right. It’s supposed to be visible again here tonight and tomorrow, a little higher in the sky than we saw it last night.

    Like

    • So many of them this year! Some I had been RIGHT THERE during the day but went home at night thinking it wasn’t going to happen. Some I just didn’t get myself out into the dark and slept instead. Now I have this image in my head of me sleeping curled up with my dog with a big corona light burst breaking out in color over the house.

      Like

  6. Wow, Dawn! Great photos of a beautiful sky.

    Like

  7. Hi Dawn! Thank you so much for sharing your Northern Lights photos. They are absolutely gorgeous! Maybe it is just me… When I look at the last photo I see an angel, her multicolored right wing in full view, her left wing mostly hot pink fading into green. 😊

    Like

  8. We were too far south to see the Northern Lights so it was one of those glorious events that I’m enjoying by seeing other people’s photos. Thanks for sharing here.

    Like

  9. I have been missing them every time this year until Thursday – it was cloudy, but I took a walk at 9 PM and it cleared, and – yep, there they were! Anyway, glad you had a great year with the Northern Lights and have a new camera to experiment with as they come up again 🙂

    Like

  10. I’m so happy for you that you’ve seen the spectacular show Ms Aurora has put on of late, Dawn. Stunning shots you captured! May’s show was crazy good and I stood in my yard for 3 hours taking countless pics!

    While in the northern Cascades this weekend, we arrived in time to see another spectacular show on Thursday night, this time from our KOA campground in Winthrop, WA. I’ll share some this Wednesday!

    You’re so right about being prepared and staying warm!

    Like

    • In May I was driving to get up to a dark sky park in the thumb…but we got a late start, it was sort of spontaneous….and we only got maybe 40 minutes north when I started seeing them in the sky while driving on the freeway. So we took the first exit, pulled off on a dirt road and stayed there perhaps an hour. Only had two vehicles pass us, one of those was a tractor. You could hear people at nearby farms and a park that was across the road yelling every time the sky shifted. It was AMAZING. We didn’t stay out as long as you though, given we were stopped in the middle of a road in we knew not where.

      Thursday night I decided, since they said it was a strong storm, to just go somewhere local and hope for the best. Earlier in the week I had spent hours driving around in the rural thumb of Michigan waiting and never saw anything. So I was done driving around. Katie’s park wasn’t perfect, but it was dark enough for me to see something. And if I had just sent my husband home and stayed there myself I would have seen the bigger show that started about an hour after we left.

      Isn’t it neat to think that we were all out there Thursday looking at the same thing? So cool.

      Liked by 1 person

      • I love that notion, Dawn. We’re lucky to live in a rural area away from city lights. While in Winthrop over the weekend, we could see the streaks of light pulsing and moving. They were gray and white to the naked eye, but the camera really lit them up. 2024 sure has been a cosmic year!

        Like

  11. These photos are fabulous Dawn – I’ve not seen anything from my home, even last week’s prediction for best viewing, as there was too much light pollution. Separately, I’ll send you a link about the comet that you can see with your eyes and you can practice more with the camera. The link is from a fellow Michigan blogger.

    Like

  12. Dawn, those are stunning!

    Like

  13. These are fantastic – we have had nothing but cloud cover up here! Thank you for sharing! xo

    Like

  14. I think they are spectacular!

    Like

  15. Amazing pics Dawn! I never did well trying to capture images in the sky at night. Looking forward to more. BTW – which camera did you get with the upgrade?

    Like

  16. The Big Dipper in that one pic is just the right accompaniment. Like marjoram 😎

    Liked by 1 person

  17. Amazing! Love all the colors. SO happy you got that experience!

    I’ve tried to see them here and have seen photos from people right up the road, but I think I don’t have the stamina to stay up late enough🙂 and also I have a really cheap phone that doesn’t have any cool photo features.

    Like

    • It’s pretty cool, but yes, to really see them, remotely like this you need to be looking through a camera of some sort. On the other hand, cheap phones are good for so many other things! 🙂

      Like

  18. Wow, what a beautiful photos. Excellent photography. I like. Wonderful shoot the moon.

    Like

Leave a reply to dawnkinster Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.