Category Archives: Photography

A Simple Sunset

Due to the holidays falling where they did, I ended up out in Camarillo at the CAF hangar late this afternoon. Unusual for a Sunday. The storms of last week are past and the storms of next week are still off in the Bering Sea, so it was clear and a million. No clouds, noting spectacular, but the color gradient was first-rate!

Tomorrow for most of us it’s back to work and school and into a whirlwind of activity after a long weekend, a week, a couple of weeks off.

Keep breathing. Try to keep smiling. I hope your re-entry into “life” is kind to you.

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Filed under Photography, Sunsets, Weather

Fog

After more days of rain (which we desperately need, so it’s welcome!) tonight it stopped and started getting much colder, down into the 30’s. I noticed that I couldn’t see a thing out the back windows, looking toward the Valley.

I went out and found the Valley to be filled with fog, but Orion brilliantly bright straight overhead where it was crystal clear. We were just barely, right at the top of the fog layer, looking over the top of it.

It was extremely spooky. I liked it.

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Filed under Photography, Weather

Tipped

It is possible that breakfast got tipped over in transport.

My apologies to the chef for destroying his plating and presentation.

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Comet Leonard

Happy to say that I’m ending 2021 on at least one high note!

Comet Leonard was discovered last January, diving toward the Sun. Its closest approach to the Sun is coming up on January 3rd, following its closest approach to Earth, which happened on December 12th. Don’t worry, it never got closer than 34.6M kilometers (21.5M miles).

Comets are notoriously lousy at allowing predictions of how bright they’ll get, and a first there wasn’t a lot of hope for Comet Leonard. However, it started unexpectedly brightening in November, and by early December it was visible in binoculars and small telescopes. It’s just in the last couple of weeks moved to where it can be seen in the evening sky in North America.

I’ve been trying to spot it for about ten days, weather permitting. A couple of times with a really good pair of binoculars I’ve thought that I might have seen it, sorta, maybe, kinda, -ish? But it’s very low in the twilight sky in the west, even when we haven’t had outright clouds, we’ve had haze and “gunk” in the sky, and I live in one of the biggest and brightest and light polluting-ist metropolitan areas on the planet.

But I haven’t given up. And neither should you.

If you want to try to find it, there are a couple of ways to know where to look. First of all, there’s a great site at The Sky Live. Change the location in at the top (unless you too are in Woodland Hills, CA) and scroll down to the map. Tonight, just before 18:00 local, mine looked like this:

(Image from The Sky Live – click to enlarge)

Note that there are three bright planets in this view and they can be your guideposts to look. Jupiter is at the top center (really bright), Venus at the bottom right having juuuuuust set in this view (really stinkin’ bright), and Saturn between them (bright). So in rough terms, right now Comet Leonard is a little to the left of a line dropped straight down to the horizon from Jupiter, and a little bit higher than Venus, maybe a third of the way up higher than Saturn is compared to Venus.

Tonight I started looking in that area with binoculars since it was crystal clear after yesterday’s rain and before tomorrow’s rain. Still low in the sky, still a ton of light pollution, and the best view in that direction that I had from my yard was a spot where I was standing directly under that stupid freakin’ streetlight. And yet, after a few minutes, there it was!!

I looked for a bit, looked away and looked back to find it again and verify that I was actually seeing it. It did NOT look like the pictures folks are taking from the Southern Hemisphere with big telescopes. But where all of the stars I could see were pinpoints, this was a tiny, fuzzy fuzzball with a slight greenish tint and the tiniest bit of tail, pointing off to about the 10:00 position. (Ignore the orientation of the tail on the Sky Live map, it’s just an icon. The real tail will point straight away from the Sun, so to the upper left.)

COOL!!!

Before it set and before the next storm could move in tonight – could I catch an image of it? While I can’t see it through the telephoto lens, using the binoculars I can see that it’s just above the tree that’s behind the neighbor’s house’s chimney which is right above their Christmas lights. Can I shoot several sets of pictures at various magnifications and exposures and eyeballing the pointing, while using bright, bright Jupiter as an object to manually focus the lens that’s notoriously difficult to focus? We wouldn’t know until I tried, right?

(CLICK ON IT!)

Using this “carpet bombing” approach and using lots of cheap memory instead of film, there are a few captures. The comet isn’t centered since I was shooting blind. but over on that right hand side, slightly below center, you’ll see a greenish fuzzy spot, which is Comet Leonard. (The bright yellow line at the top is a power line, illuminated by that freakin’ streetlight just over my head.)

This is a 2 second exposure at 135mm on the zoom lens. What about a 4 second exposure?

Where are we looking? Compare the stars you can see to the area highlighted in this zoomed in version of the Sky Live map:

What if I zoom in? Still getting lucky?

4 seconds at 300mm zoom. Comet Leonard over on the far right center.

2.5 seconds at 300mm zoom. Comet Leonard in the upper right corner. How close are we getting to the horizon? Even zoomed in this far, at the bottom you can see the top of that tree behind the neighbor’s chimney… In five minutes, it will be gone and the air near the horizon is getting thick and soupy, fast.

This might well have been the last real chance I’ll have to see Comet Leonard given our weather forecast, but I’ll be keeping my eyes open, just in case. Over the next week or two Comet Leonard will be moving a bit each night to the left and up a bit, but it will also be getting more dim as it pulls away from the Earth.

Good comet hunting as we come up on the New Year!

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Filed under Astronomy, Photography, Space

Christmas 2021

I hope it was a wonderful holiday for you and your family if you observe, and a wonderful normal day of the usual 365.25 if you don’t.

It was a little odd for me, the timing of our family celebration last week, the disrupted schedule, the big family event at the football game last week, this morning’s highly anticipated and highly successful rocket launch of JWST, life, life, and more life…

Thank goodness we have electronic devices that can tell us what day and date and time it is at a second’s notice. Even then, it’s been just…disorienting.

But the presents have all been opened, JWST is on her way, and stability, as much as it can be treasured, is probably a bit overrated.

At least, that’s my story. I’m sticking to it.

Merry Christmas, y’all.

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Filed under Christmas Lights, Photography

Christmas Eve Rainbow

We’ve had a couple of days of decent, much-needed rain here, a bit over 3″. Given that our total for last year was only 5.38″ with annual averages of only 16.41″, that’s a good chunk of our seasonal allocation.

Today was calmer with scattered showers around, and tomorrow we’re expected to get the next big round. But scattered showers sometime mean scattered sun, and when they mix:

I’ll take helpful signs and colorful reminders that there’s good to be found in the world. I’ll take all we can get.

Merry Christmas Eve, y’all. Let’s hope that Christmas Day gives us a successful launch of JWST (in about four hours) on an ESA Ariane-5 rocket (yes, I’ll be trying to get up to watch). Let’s hope that the last week of 2021 and all of 2022 are better than 2021 and 2020 were.

Get vaccinated. Mask up. Stay socially distanced.

Let’s be smart and stay alive, folks. We’ve got a lot of great things to live for and wonderful rainbows to see in the future, both the near future and the far distant future.

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Almost Christmas

It’s the end of Christmas Eve Eve. At least the tree is decorated.

The annual flood of 350+ Willett Family Christmas cards? Yeah, soon now. Really, really soon. For very large values of “Christmas.”

One way or the other, we’re almost there.

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Filed under Christmas Lights, Photography

I Blame The Flag

I was checking the Christmas lights tonight to see if anything was broken or burnt out, particularly the big bulbs. I was pleasantly surprised to see only three out.

See them? What caught my attention was their positioning, on either side of the flag, about where the flag would be snapping against the roof in really high winds. We’ve had a lot of really high winds. That flag being whipped out full and snapping against those lights…

(Annotated, to show the position of the three lights)

I blame the flag. Well, the flag and the wind. They’re in cahoots.

On the other hand, three bulbs at about fifty cents each is a small enough price to pay being as we’re 2/3 of the way through Christmas lights season.

Fingers crossed.

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Pushing Back The Dark

It’s the winter solstice, the shortest day and longest night of the year in the Northern Hemisphere. It’s no coincidence that all of the major religions have significant holidays around this time of year. Their ancestors knew. We sometimes forget.

These days are dark, both literally and figuratively. Let’s all work to make the coming days brighter, shining our light into the world, pushing back on the darkness. The astronomy and physics will be what it will be, even if none of us is here, so let’s work on some of the things we can affect so that we will be here in the future.

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A Four-Squirrel Day

Simple day – the most notable event was a “record” number of squirrels in the backyard. It was the first time I remember ever seeing four at once.

Sunday brunch for the little rat bastards. A fun time was had by all – so long as no one invites a hawk.

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Filed under Critters, Photography