Jump to content

Any Northern Lights Pics from a Cruise? (May 10-11, 2024)


Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

Hearing the Northern Lights were spectacular last night in Alaska (and might be again tonight!). Would love to see pics if anyone was able to snap some from last night (or tonight) from a cruise!! 🤩

Edited by CCAubs
Posted too soon
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Posted (edited)

We drove up to Madison, Wisconsin to escape the bright city lights of Chicago where we live.  The aurora was quite visible on Friday night--it basically covered the whole sky including overhead.  There was nothing to see on Saturday night despite clear skies.  We drove home today but I will take a peek tonight to see if there is anything out there.

 

Here are some photos that I took on Friday night and very early Saturday morning.  They were all taken with a 16 mm wide angle lens with a full frame DSLR camera.  These were taken from the same spot on the south shore of Lake Mendota.  The constellation Leo was shining through the aurora in each of he photos (the stars are more conspicuous when you click/tap on them to see a larger photo).

 

DSC_7384-Enhanced-NR.thumb.jpg.3a280827259ecd4586ab35320c014553.jpg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.da24c50af114bb9d88696feb6ebde683.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.9df8cf4c6164150458d3573d770a5dea.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.52d5d54d072c55b169e4be9a55ea8e3a.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.32558cffb93b5f016c141d6f42b516a0.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.5f63901246f2e7ed9005556f7c9260d5.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8c151a335d7f4b3e0c1ec00058ee4fde.jpeg

 

This photo was taken from the parking lot and it is looking at the sky opposite from where the above photos were taken.  If you tap/click on the photo, the Big Dipper is easily seen above the trees:

 

image.thumb.jpeg.400d9c61ac081c8351029a07c6da89d0.jpeg

 

These two photos were taken from looking straight up.  The view was surreal. 

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8d82175efc1c764627ea9814e135029d.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8a74cceb0c3e4077b0db69e07dfb7002.jpeg

 

I can only imagine how awesome the view must have been from Alaska!

Edited by mahdnc
  • Like 6
Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, mahdnc said:

We drove up to Madison, Wisconsin to escape the bright city lights of Chicago where we live.  The aurora was quite visible on Friday night--it basically covered the whole sky including overhead.  There was nothing to see on Saturday night despite clear skies.  We drove home today but I will take a peek tonight to see if there is anything out there.

 

Here are some photos that I took on Friday night and very early Saturday morning.  They were all taken with a 16 mm wide angle lens with a full frame DSLR camera.  These were taken from the same spot on the south shore of Lake Mendota.  The constellation Leo was shining through the aurora in each of he photos (the stars are more conspicuous when you click/tap on them to see a larger photo).

 

DSC_7384-Enhanced-NR.thumb.jpg.3a280827259ecd4586ab35320c014553.jpg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.da24c50af114bb9d88696feb6ebde683.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.9df8cf4c6164150458d3573d770a5dea.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.52d5d54d072c55b169e4be9a55ea8e3a.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.32558cffb93b5f016c141d6f42b516a0.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.5f63901246f2e7ed9005556f7c9260d5.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8c151a335d7f4b3e0c1ec00058ee4fde.jpeg

 

This photo was taken from the parking lot and it is looking at the sky opposite from where the above photos were taken.  If you tap/click on the photo, the Big Dipper is easily seen above the trees:

 

image.thumb.jpeg.400d9c61ac081c8351029a07c6da89d0.jpeg

 

These two photos were taken from looking straight up.  The view was surreal. 

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8d82175efc1c764627ea9814e135029d.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8a74cceb0c3e4077b0db69e07dfb7002.jpeg

 

I can only imagine how awesome the view must have been from Alaska!

 

These photos are INCREDIBLE! Thank you so much for sharing!

 

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 5/13/2024 at 4:34 AM, mahdnc said:

I can only imagine how awesome the view must have been from Alaska!

Actually, in more northern latitudes like Alaska (and Finland, where I live), the short nights (or lack of night in the northern most areas where midnight sun season has already begun) make it quite hard to photograph northern lights this time of year. I did still managed to snap few decent aurora shots on Saturday-Sunday night, although Friday-Saturday night was a miss for me as my chosen location at Lake Saimaa was cloud covered (and strong cold northernly winds would have made it miserable to stand on a lake shore doing photography), although it is quite good location for astrophotography as there isn't much light pollution. Aurora photography is definately much easier other times of year when there is longer and darker nights.

 

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, Hezu said:

Actually, in more northern latitudes like Alaska (and Finland, where I live), the short nights (or lack of night in the northern most areas where midnight sun season has already begun) make it quite hard to photograph northern lights this time of year. I did still managed to snap few decent aurora shots on Saturday-Sunday night, although Friday-Saturday night was a miss for me as my chosen location at Lake Saimaa was cloud covered (and strong cold northernly winds would have made it miserable to stand on a lake shore doing photography), although it is quite good location for astrophotography as there isn't much light pollution. Aurora photography is definately much easier other times of year when there is longer and darker nights.

 

 

Thank you for that--you make very good points.  Sorry to hear Fri/Sat was a washout though.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had to research what the bottom (last) two photos were that I posted because although it was an aurora, I had never seen it shaped like that and it was over my head.

 

Evidently what I saw is called an aurora corona and according to this website, it is "widely considered to be the most impressive type of aurora".  I guess I would agree.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 hours ago, Hezu said:

Actually, in more northern latitudes like Alaska (and Finland, where I live), the short nights (or lack of night in the northern most areas where midnight sun season has already begun) make it quite hard to photograph northern lights this time of year. I did still managed to snap few decent aurora shots on Saturday-Sunday night, although Friday-Saturday night was a miss for me as my chosen location at Lake Saimaa was cloud covered (and strong cold northernly winds would have made it miserable to stand on a lake shore doing photography), although it is quite good location for astrophotography as there isn't much light pollution. Aurora photography is definately much easier other times of year when there is longer and darker nights.

 

 

Ah, that's a great point. I didn't even think of that!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 5/12/2024 at 8:34 PM, mahdnc said:

We drove up to Madison, Wisconsin to escape the bright city lights of Chicago where we live.  The aurora was quite visible on Friday night--it basically covered the whole sky including overhead.  There was nothing to see on Saturday night despite clear skies.  We drove home today but I will take a peek tonight to see if there is anything out there.

 

Here are some photos that I took on Friday night and very early Saturday morning.  They were all taken with a 16 mm wide angle lens with a full frame DSLR camera.  These were taken from the same spot on the south shore of Lake Mendota.  The constellation Leo was shining through the aurora in each of he photos (the stars are more conspicuous when you click/tap on them to see a larger photo).

 

DSC_7384-Enhanced-NR.thumb.jpg.3a280827259ecd4586ab35320c014553.jpg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.da24c50af114bb9d88696feb6ebde683.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.9df8cf4c6164150458d3573d770a5dea.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.52d5d54d072c55b169e4be9a55ea8e3a.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.32558cffb93b5f016c141d6f42b516a0.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.5f63901246f2e7ed9005556f7c9260d5.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8c151a335d7f4b3e0c1ec00058ee4fde.jpeg

 

This photo was taken from the parking lot and it is looking at the sky opposite from where the above photos were taken.  If you tap/click on the photo, the Big Dipper is easily seen above the trees:

 

image.thumb.jpeg.400d9c61ac081c8351029a07c6da89d0.jpeg

 

These two photos were taken from looking straight up.  The view was surreal. 

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8d82175efc1c764627ea9814e135029d.jpeg

 

image.thumb.jpeg.8a74cceb0c3e4077b0db69e07dfb7002.jpeg

 

I can only imagine how awesome the view must have been from Alaska!

WOW! Beautiful! Thank you for sharing. How did seeing them with the naked eye compare with your photos? I'd love to see them sometime, but I also want to know what to expect. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Firehunter said:

WOW! Beautiful! Thank you for sharing. How did seeing them with the naked eye compare with your photos? I'd love to see them sometime, but I also want to know what to expect. 

 

When you are photographing the aurora, you alternately marvel at what you see in the sky and then you admire what you captured on your camera's LCD screen.  Here is my naked eye vs photo comparison and explanation.

 

1. Brightness.  The aurora was definitely much dimmer to the naked eye.  Looked like a moon lit cloud at best.

 

2. Colors.  The aurora colors were dull and muted to the naked eye.  You could make out the colors with your eye, but the colors in the photos are a lot more vibrant.  To me the aurora looked gray-ish with light shades of red and green.  My wife and I are in our 60's and there were 6-10 students from the University of Wisconsin (Madison) campus with us at any one time.  When I was listening to them, it seemed like they could pick out the colors more readily than my wife and I could thereby proving that not only is youth wasted on the young, but so is eyesight.

 

3. Shape.  The aurora definitely looked more diffuse to my eyes however I could make out the general shapes but I could not see the immediate changing of shape (noticed it over time) or any shimmering.  When I rolled down my car window in a neighborhood street to get my first look (my eyes were not very dark adapted), you could see the aurora hanging down from the sky like a curtain.  However the photos show the overall shape much better as well as the shapes of the colors within the aurora.  One memorable view was looking directly up above me in a brightly lit parking lot at what I later learned to be an aurora corona (my last two photos in my post).  While the camera definitely shows it better, with your eyes you could easily make out something--gray--that was unworldly, ghastly, and surreal.  It looked like some kind of gigantic mythical bird was forming out of the sky above and it was about to come for me (in a bad way).

 

4. Size/Expanse.  Although the light gathering ability of the camera sensor reveals "more" aurora, what was unmistakable to the naked eye that night was the sheer expanse, wide coverage, large scale, and humongous size of the entire aurora display--it covered much of the whole sky in all directions.  It was as memorable as it was amazing--something your eye could take in but the camera failed to adequately capture.

 

5. Stars.  It is much more evident in the photos, but it was impressive for me to see with my own eyes how the stars shine through the aurora undimmed--something that makes it unmistakably different than a cloud.

 

David

Edited by mahdnc
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
 Share

  • Forum Jump
    • Categories
      • Welcome to Cruise Critic
      • New Cruisers
      • Cruise Lines “A – O”
      • Cruise Lines “P – Z”
      • River Cruising
      • ROLL CALLS
      • Cruise Critic News & Features
      • Digital Photography & Cruise Technology
      • Special Interest Cruising
      • Cruise Discussion Topics
      • UK Cruising
      • Australia & New Zealand Cruisers
      • Canadian Cruisers
      • North American Homeports
      • Ports of Call
      • Cruise Conversations
×
×
  • Create New...