09/17/2024
AMAZED...yet again. Never would I have imagined chasing the aurora borealis more often in southern Wyoming than I ever did in 20 years living in the Pacific Northwest. Yet here I am, grabbing cameras and batteries, running out the door into the dark of night... only tonight, it’s really not that dark.
With a nearly full moon rising in the east, I figured it wasn’t likely I could capture this solar storm. But a wise word of wisdom in landscape photography is "you don’t know unless you go" so I made the 40-minute drive to the Pole Mountain area, where I had pinned this tree on my map, noting it would be a great shot facing north if there were ever a solar storm to grace the skies behind it like a watercolor background.
As I arrived on the scene, I couldn’t believe that, even with unadjusted eyes, I was seeing color in the sky out of the car window. I bailed as fast as I could, ran to the tree, and grabbed half a dozen shots with my iPhone. I know from experience: if it’s there, you better shoot quickly because 10 seconds later, it might be gone. The wispy clouds added nicely to the drama, and my heart was racing as I quickly set up my other camera.
And sure enough, by the time I set up my tripod, the aurora had faded. But I saw it, I caught it, and I’m thrilled. However, I’m not done yet. As I post this, I currently have two cameras set up running time-lapse in hopes that the aurora will rise again. All of the data points to that being a real possibility. So I’m hunkered down for the long haul, and we will see what happens.