Northern Lights


Northern Lights and a Meteor

On July 21st, people in Asia were enjoying the longest solar eclipse of the century, and I was enjoying one of my shortest nights. I have been monitoring for solar activity for years in hopes of seeing some Northern Lights. Unfortunately for me, our sun has been very quiet for a few years. But on that night, I started seeing notifications of strong solar activity.

I’m signed up for email alerts for aural activity, check a space weather website, and have a program that lets me know the likelihood of seeing the Northern Lights. Yeah, it’s geeky, but it’s what you have to do if you want to photograph the Northern Lights. Some friends asked how I knew it was going to be happening that night and I showed them my ways of checking, much to their amusement. The strange thing is, just after they finish snickering about the geek factor, they ask me to call them next time it happens. Maybe I’ll wait until 3 AM to call.

Anyway, it was an especially good night for observing Aurora Borealis. The solar eclipse earlier in the day meant that it was a new moon, so even faint auroral activity would be visible because of the dark sky. The sky was also clear with little cloud cover forecast. The only problem for me was waiting until late at night for the sun to go down enough for the sky to get dark here in Central Alberta.

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The auroral oval that night came a long way south.

As it was getting darker I kept going out to look and see if the aurora was visible in the northern sky. I probably went out four times before I happened to look straight up and see a very active aurora directly overhead. So I scrambled to get my gear out and start photographing. I even managed to pry Naomi out of bed for a few minutes to witness the event.


Aurora Overhead

The auroral display was fantastic and some of the best I have seen in recent years, certainly the best since I seriously got into photography. Over the next few hours they slowly moved from overhead to filling the northern part of the sky, with many periods where there was just a green glow and no activity. After a few minutes the aurora would come alive with activity, with bright green and blue lights dancing around. During some of the quiet periods I turned my wide angle lens straight up to capture the Milky Way and a chance meteor.

Meteor in the Milky Way
Meteor in the Milky Way

Given the weak auroras I have seen in recent years, I would have been excited about any of the photos I got that night, but I literally have hundreds. I reluctantly packed up my gear at 2:30 am and headed inside, leaving the still dancing sky to start downloading 8 GB of photos.


Ghostly Lights


God Amazes Me

For much of the time, I had the camera set up to take continuous six-second exposures that I was able to put together as a time lapse movie.


View large HD version here

Reminds me of a time many years ago when I was out with my telescope doing some star watching when the Northern Lights kicked into action. It would be just a glow, then occasionally some features would appear and dance around, then fade away. One of my co-workers had asked me to call if I ever saw them so I called on my bag phone (that’s how long ago it was). As we were talking I told her about how it would get active and die down again. At that moment it was quite calm and we were just chatting. Suddenly, the sky was alive with auroral activity. “Hey, here come some features,” I said, just as my old phone died. What she heard was, “Hey, here come some creatures,” then “click.” Her imagination went wild with the idea that I was out in the middle of some field being attacked by creatures and she had no way to know where I was. I thought she seemed strangely relieved when she saw me the next day at work.

See more of my photos under the night sky.

Summer in one weekend

When your summer is as cool as this one has been, you have to cram in your summer activities whenever you can, and that was exactly what we did the first weekend of August!

We had been wanting to go camping with friends, but with daytime highs of 14C (mid 50s F) and lots of rain, camping would not be fun. That just isn’t right for the first week of August. Thankfully the forecast changed to something resembling summer and so we hastily made some plans. It was also rodeo weekend here in Olds, which we didn’t want to miss. So, we went to the parade and rodeo on Friday, and Saturday we headed east to Drumheller for our first big camping adventure.

At this age, the kids are pretty easy to entertain. Just give them a big enough area and they chase each other around. The campground we stayed at was pretty nice. All the individual camping spots were taken, so we ended up getting a “group” spot. For two families it worked out to be cheaper, plus we had a huge are for the kids to run with with grass (normal camping spots were pretty much empty of grass), and we were away from the crowded main area! The downside was the pool. We got in and it was a bit murky. I joked about how you couldn’t see your feet in the pool, then I stopped laughing when I looked down and realized it was actually true. Just before we got out I noticed this thick, slimy stuff floating in the corners. I pointed it out to Alan and made a comment about how it couldn’t really be more gross when we noticed Adelaine holding someone’s band-aid she had found in the pool. That was the final straw and I was desperate enough to overcome my cheapness and use the pay showers.

We had a nice fire and stayed out late talking to our friends quite late after the kids went to bed. The night was pretty cold (10C!) and Ethan and the girls woke up in the night, but isn’t that all part of camping?

Drumheller bills itself as the Dinosaur capital of Canada and the place had lots of dinosaur figures, paintings, stores, and activities around town. So after breaking camp in the morning we went off for lunch and then to Fossil World, a kids mini museum and activity place.

Ellie waiting for the parade Papa helping Adelaine pick up candy. Papa helping Adelaine pick up candy.
Ethan and I disappointed that Ronald wasn't passing out Big Macs.
Ellie is confussed by Jessica's invisible Dog.
Later that day at the Rodeo Disappointment
Airborne
Barrel Racing Barrel Racing
Bull riding Bravery - Rodeo clowns are there to keep the bull from killing the rider.
Saturday at the campground Chasing bunnies at the campground Ellie and Benjamin
Smores face Reading books before bed Tongues out
Book worms Princess Ellie and her friend Benjamin At Fossil World in Drumheller
T-Rex Run away! Run away!
Ice cream face Giving the dinosaur a goodby hug and kiss Big dinosaur

Nutty circle runners:

At Fossil World:

Before she stops jumping up and down, she is saying that she wants to take a picture. That is my girl!

It was a very busy weekend, but we loved it. Lots of fun with good friends outdoors. Ahhh.. a nice summer weekend.

Prayer Letter :: Summer 2009

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It’s been a busy (and cool) summer that is going by too fast. We are preparing for a trip to the Maritimes and Ontario for September and have many other things going on. Please check out all the details of our lives and ministry with GoodSeed in our latest prayer letter: www.troyandnaomi.com/pdf/2009-summer-prayer-letter.pdf

God bless,

Troy & Naomi, Ellie, Adelaine and “Ethan-man”

Storm Damage

I used to really love big summer storms. The raw power is awesome to watch. However, whenever a storm comes through now, I likely know someone who’s crops are getting damaged and they are losing income for their family. Over the weekend we had a number of severe storms come through that damaged crops.

About this time of year the heads of the grain crops are getting heavy with seed. A good rain makes them heavier and some wind can easily push it down. It isn’t unusual to see a few patches in most fields where small areas have been flattened. Sometimes, it will come back up as it dries, but often it just means more work for the farmer to harvest that area of the field. Occasionally a whole field will get hit hard, such as this one.

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This is the result of a heavy rain and wind storm that came through. The stalks are intact and the farmer can likely still get this crop off.

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Usually a storm rolls through as an isolated storm cell a few kilometers wide with a relatively thin trail of damage, if any. It may even drop some hail, but that is often just small areas, maybe a few hundreds of meters wide, and only damage just part of a field. Not so with the storm we had early Monday morning.

I had been following the storm for several hours that night and had decided it would be best for me to stay up and be ready in case the worst happened. You don’t want to be woken up unprepared by this kind of thing. Environment Canada had some dire warnings:

At 12:20 A.M. MDT radar shows a pair of strong thunderstorms – one cell 55 km southwest of Rocky Mountain House and a second cell 35 km south of Rocky Mountain House. These cells are both moving southwards at 40 km/h. These storms produced baseball sized hail earlier this evening. These storms are also capable of giving gusty winds and heavy downpours.
This is a warning that severe thunderstorms are imminent or occurring in these regions. Remember that some severe thunderstorms produce tornadoes. Listen for updated warnings.

I was tracking the storm on the weather radar, and had never seen a storm that registered red and purple on the rainfall scale. This was going to be bad.

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It turned out not too severe at our house and the heaviest rain went to the south. Still, the storm was very impressive. Strong winds and rain came down with nearly constant lightning all around. It was like a having a giant strobe light going outside. Later in the morning we started hearing stories from friends about sheets of rain, strong wind and, further south, hail. Some friends showed photos online of total crop failure, damaged houses and trees, and hail still piled up next to their houses hours after the storm. We decided to take a drive the next day to see for ourselves.

Like I said, normally hail damages narrow swaths of fields, occasionally a whole field gets hit.. What we found was field after field of flattened crop. Many of them looked like they had been mowed down.. which they had by the wind-driven hail. It is hard to take a picture of such a field that gets across the level of destruction because it just looks like a green mess.

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This is a friend’s crop.. the whole field is just smashed stalks.

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A destroyed canola field:
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We didn’t think it could get worse, but further down the road we found this area was even more devastated, with just a few shattered canola stocks sticking up from the ground..

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The trees suffered quite significantly too. From a distance, they looked like they do in early spring, just a green haze on them to suggest that leaves are budding. Instead, it is just fragments of leaves.
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Leaves knocked off the trees by hail:
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A green carpet of lost needles and cones:
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These trees should have lots of leaves:
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Houses and property suffered lots of damage in this area too. The north side of many houses had damaged siding and some had broken windows.

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Notice the busted window on the second floor:
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Thankfully, we haven’t heard of anyone getting hurt or of any tornadoes touching down.