Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/02/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 2/23/99 9:26:23 PM Eastern Standard Time, 71247.3542@compuserve.com writes: > Only the higher-altitude lights can be photographed; these are the graceful > sheets of pale light that wave slowly in the cosmic wind. This is what I want to shoot. This is what I've dreamed of seeing and shooting since I first heard of the Lights (Leitz; a coincidence? I don't think so!) decades ago. > The low-altitude stuff is something else entirely: wild spinning flashes of > every imaginable (and more) vibrant color. The shutter speeds required to > record an image are way too long to catch anything other than an indistinct > blur. The low altitude lights are very rare; in my 6 summers in Denali Even with a Noctilux wide open? (A serious question, as I've never shot them and when I do, I may never have a second chance. I'd like to be prepared.) > National Park I saw them only once, for about a half-hour of utterly > painful ecstasy. Their beauty is too painful to watch, too amazing to not > watch. If you happen to see the low-altitude lights forget the camera, > live in the moment for it is one that will change your perspective on life > forever. > Doug Herr > Sacramento With such a description, I cannot imagine being stuck in Sacramento (no insult intended; your statement just seems at odds with such a cosmopolitan area). My wife and I are always scheming to get out into the wilds and enjoy nature. Thank you for the exquisite observation. /Mitch