CharlesBrooks

CharlesBrooks OP t1_j7julit wrote

You could spend years photographing there.... In fact that's what I plan on doing. Setting up a business to take people out for astrophotography. There are heaps of 3-4 hour astronomy tours, but few that give you time to take out your camera and capture scenes like this.

Gets a bit complex as many of the most interesting spots are closed at night (Valle de la luna etc), so I'm negotiating with indigenous leaders to see what can be done.

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CharlesBrooks OP t1_j7i0uf3 wrote

Two things - first the sky was tracked with a benro Polaris, that's why I don't have star trails.

Second - this is one of the darkest places on earth. No light pollution for hundreds of miles. I'm also at an altitude of around 4000 meters so there's little atmosphere to shoot through, and the atmosphere is bone dry. This is why some of the world's largest observatories are in this region.

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CharlesBrooks OP t1_j7gaicb wrote

About 2 hours north of San Pedro de Atacama is Machuca Territory.
The tribe that live here are the only that haven't sold their water rights to the giant mining companies. The result is a literal oasis full of flamingos, cacti, rivers, salt plains, geysers, and astonishing night views like this....

photo is made of 2 frames

60 seconds tracked for the stars (ISO 2000, f/3, 60 seconds)
60 seconds untracked for the land (ISO 5000, f/5.6, 60 seconds)

Lumix S5
Lumix 24-70 pro
Benro Polaris

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