03/15/2025
Before I owned a telescope, the first picture I ever took of space was a lunar eclipse. It was April 15, 2014 and despite getting a pretty decent picture without knowing what I was doing, the thing I remember more than anything was this very pronounced, inescapable, unsettling feeling in my chest. It's the same feeling I would end up getting for years and years when I pulled down the first frame of a galaxy, or a nebula, or a planet, or whatever. Like, WHAT IS THIS AND WHAT IS HAPPENING?! That primal fear can't be juked, and it's wonderfully humbling.
It all happened again early Friday morning, and hopefully some of you got to share in it! Despite the wispy clouds that fluttered throughout the 1ish hour of totality locally, it was a remarkable event. It's been quite a while since we had a good (clear) full lunar eclipse with the moon high in the sky - and for that reason, this is the best I've done since I nabbed my first one 11 years ago. Enjoy!
Scope: 8" Orion Astrograph
Mount: CGEM
Camera: Olympus Air A01
Control: Custom Python script over WiFi
Exposures: 168 x 1/6s @ ISO 1600