10/14/2023 Annular Eclipse of the Sun

This is not the first annular eclipse video you’ve seen or the best, but it’s mine. Shot from Midland, TX Saturday October 14, 2023. My son, Jack, and I drove down Friday and met my friends Carl & Darcy where we all set up in a small city park. We did not go unnoticed and attracted a small crowd of about 30 people who stayed for most of the eclipse. We all had a great time.

Near the start of annularity, I noticed that the shadows of my fingers looked weird. Like they were illuminated by two point sources, because in a way they were. It was noticeably darker during annularity.

Also, Darcy told us to look for Venus and about 10 minutes before annularity we could make it out and that became easy during annularity.

In the run up to annularity and after, it’s one image per minute. During annularity it was one image every five seconds. That is why it slowed down in the middle. Shot with a Canon 800D and 300mm zoom.

After it was over, we packed up and had some lunch and then drove home. The trip home was much easier and we arrived at 12:06AM Sunday morning.

9/29/2023 The Moon

The Moon shot Friday night shortly after it rose. If I wanted really high resolution, I would have waited a few hours until it was higher. I used my 127mm MCT telescope and my Canon 800D camera. Merged and processed in Lightroom.

2/18/2023 Comet c/2022 E3 (ZTF)

While my DSLR was shooting the Orion Molecular Cloud Complex, my C11 (Elf) and ASI294MC Pro (which has no name) was shooting the currently famous comet at f/1.9. Below we have the result of 120 60 second images with both the comet and stars stacked independently. I’ve seen better but this one is mine. Taken Friday evening at the River Ridge Observatory.

LinkedIn
LinkedIn
Share