What to video during a solar eclipse?
I will be in the path of total darkness during the solar eclipse of August 21, 2017. I plan to be in alpine wilderness (Oregon Cascades), but will adjust my location as needed so that there are no clouds.
I'll have a single 4K video camera, tripod, ample recording memory, and batteries.
While the typical eclipse video is a direct image of the sun waning, then black with halo, then waxing, etc., I suspect there will be adequate quantities of those videos available for viewing.
I am hoping to capture something more unusual -- something that isn't routinely photographed. Ideas which spring to mind:
- environmental changes attendant upon the eclipse, such as wind direction, air temperature, stream flow, ambient sound, etc.
- wildlife behavioral changes: birds, mammals, rodents, fish, insects, etc.
- vegetation changes: what do flowers which open for daylight or track the sun do for two minutes of darkness and about 60 minutes of variable darkness before and about 60 minutes afterward?
Are there other features attendant on a total solar eclipse which I could capture with my equipment and that are relatively rarely photographed except in scientific expeditions?
Likewise, are there any aspects which you know might be a waste of time to try to capture?
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/q/16701. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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Video the zillions of tiny eclipse images, as the eclipse proceeds, which are produced by the gaps in foliage.
Any set of bushes or trees in front of the sun will have the effect of presenting many, many tiny apertures, each of which will cast an image of the eclipse on the ground or another surface (e.g. a wall, depending on the angle).
It's pretty impressive, and beautiful. It's actually more spectacular when the eclipse presents a crescent than when it is full - thousands of tiny crescents, each slowly developing. Like watching lots of camera obscura.
I first noticed this by accident, and it was quite startling. Everyone around had prepared the usual means of observing the eclipse: lens to paper, film negative, etc. It was when I used binoculars to cast the image onto paper that I noticed that the ground was in fact filled with a multitude of tiny eclipses.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/16734. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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