Dear Bill, Steve, Blick, Herb, and WeatherCat shutterbugs, . . .
To get images such as the meteors, you actually don't need a telescope, but you do need to know a little physics and math.
. . . .
So, if you have a 50mm lens, and a full frame camera, you have 10 seconds of exposure before the stars will trail. For meteors,, wide is good, so I used a 14mm lens on a full frame camera and that gave me 35 seconds of exposure (and I used 30 on this one to be safe). I opened the shutter and got a meteor in that 30 second time frame.
Okay, I'm still a little confused. So did you manually take picture after picture until you had one with a meteor on it - or were you just lucky?
I haven't done this sort of things since before digital. In those situations it seemed better to mount the camera on an equatorial telescope so that you had more time to wait for the meteors to fly buy. If you are using 35mm film, it wasn't so easy to take hundreds of photos in one night and development wasn't free. When I went after meteors, I could typically expose at least an hour. Alas, my setup wasn't as good, so usually the stars wouldn't be points, but that was sloppiness on my part.
I don't have a working telescope at the moment, but I would like to set myself up to do coaxial photography once more. It is a easy way to take some breathtaking images.
Dark skies are a blessing and something to be preserved.
We live in an area designated as a "Dark Sky Reserve" - North America's first. I have been doing the photography for the project, and have been giving night lessons and so forth now for a couple of years. It is very rewarding, but does take some effort to get folks onboard.
The link below details our efforts - and almost all of the images on the pages are mine.
Thanks for sharing. I had never heard of the phrase "Astro-tourism" but long before the phrase was coined, I was driving many miles to to seek dark skies. It changed the sort of telescope I was trying to use and in a strange way saved my 50 year old Buick Special wagon. My parents were afraid to drive the car any distance, but I had a friend with a 1967 Ford wagon driving hundreds of miles with it to find dark skies. So I would lug my large telescope in the back of my wagon and she never let me down no matter how many miles I went in search of dark skies.
You are right - I didn't include my weather instruments, so it should be "illegal" ! LOL
Well at this point that prohibition seems out the window, but I do hope someone posts some weather instrument related photos to get this thread back on topic!
Cheers, Edouard
![Cheers [cheers1]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/food-smiley-004.gif)