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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Star Trails
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<blockquote data-quote="STM" data-source="post: 373143" data-attributes="member: 12827"><p>Absolutely, I was at 7500 feet MSL and it was in the 40's when I first started shooting. Don't make the same mistake I did, have SPARE WARM (!!) BATTERIES! on hand. I was only able to get 125 shots out of freshly charged batteries at the temperature before they gave up the ghost. It was somewhat difficult to find the North Star at first because the sky was absolutely <em>clobbered</em> with stars. No light pollution is amazing, we have no idea just how many stars there are in the sky! The Milky Way was extremely bright as well.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="STM, post: 373143, member: 12827"] Absolutely, I was at 7500 feet MSL and it was in the 40's when I first started shooting. Don't make the same mistake I did, have SPARE WARM (!!) BATTERIES! on hand. I was only able to get 125 shots out of freshly charged batteries at the temperature before they gave up the ghost. It was somewhat difficult to find the North Star at first because the sky was absolutely [I]clobbered[/I] with stars. No light pollution is amazing, we have no idea just how many stars there are in the sky! The Milky Way was extremely bright as well. [/QUOTE]
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