Thursday 12 January 2017

Full Moon - 12 January 2017

I got one shot at tonight's full moon before it was covered in clouds. When the sun, moon and earth all line up at full moon then we get the highest (and indeed lowest) tides which are called 'spring' tides (nothing to do with the time of year!). In fact it takes a bit of time for the enormous mass of water to move, so the spring tide will actually occur a couple of days after the full moon.


Birders are always very keen to know about the current phase of the moon, because some of the best shoreline birding is done on high tides because they force wading and other birds to roost closer to the land. Where there are salt marshes, the land creatures that inhabit them are also forced to move further inland and this can often produce the spectacles of raptors and owls hunting and catching them with views much closer than normal.

Wednesday 11 January 2017

Moonburst Over Astley

Although I mainly blog about birds and birding, I do occasionally take landscape photographs and indeed, I am hoping to do more of this in the future. With the prospect of clear skies and a bright moon, I went down to Astley Green Colliery this evening to take a shot I've been thinking of for a quite a while.


The Colliery is now a coal-mining museum and I believe the pit head winding gear is the last one still standing in the whole of this region and, as such, it is quite an iconic structure around these parts.

My aim was to take a photograph of the moon with the colliery pit head gear in the foreground and it has to be said that I didn't realise how difficult this was going be in terms of exposure. I've taken photos of the moon before with decent results, but trying to include some detail in the foreground objects proved to be very challenging. Either the moon was too bright or the pit head too dark.

After several attempts with different settings, it became clear that I wasn't going to be able to get the shot I wanted tonight. In the end I had to opt for an atmospheric shot with the moon having a starburst effect. I now think the only way of pulling the shot is to bracket a number of exposures and combine them together using software.

This is a shot to which I will return many times.

Sunday 1 January 2017

Welcome to GeekTeacher's Astro Scrapbook

Hi there! I've started this new blog off to avoid filling my main birding blog with astro photos.  With the current Coronavirus lockdown situation, I'm not going out birding at the moment and I'm spending a lot more time standing in the freezing cold in my back garden at night, looking up towards the wonderful skies.

I decided to backdate this blog to the moments where I think I began taking a real interest in astrophotography, which really means when I started taking photos of the moon. Since I got some decent digital camera equipment, I've regularly taken photos of the moon and I can trace my interest back to Astley Moss where I took a partial lunar eclipse in 2013.

But our family also went to France in 1999 to view the total eclipse of the sun which I recorded on video - I've still to find that tape so I can digitise it for inclusion in this blog.

This current phase of more intense interest in the night sky started back in 2019 when I visited North Wales on a landscape photography shoot.  I'd been seeing a lot of Milky Way photos on Facebook by people who live there and I thought, well if they can do that, so can I.  So I arranged a trip out with Pete Lawless to do some landscape photography during the day, with the plan of meeting up with a couple of the locals in the evening to do some Milky Way shots on Anglesey. Things didn't quite work out like that and I ended up doing it in the dark on my own in the Ogwen Valley.  Well, I say on my own - there was an almost constant stream of people going up to wild camp near Llyn Ogwen and coming down from Tryfan with headlights on whilst I was there!

Anyway that's how it all started, let's see where it goes from here.