Photographing a meteor shower is more like photographing a time-lapse than traditional still photos. You can never anticipate where or when a meteor is going to streak across the sky. In order to catch them, you have to set up and take as many photos as you can throughout the night with a wide angle lens on the camera. If you leave the camera in the same position, you can use the resulting images for a short time-lapse clip in addition to the still images you can capture.
MY GO-TO GEAR CHECKLIST
24mm 1.4 Canon lens: These are my go-to night lenses.24mm 1.4 Rokinon lens: The f/1.4 aperture will pick up even the faintest meteors, and you will end up with about 2-3x as many in your photos compared to an f/2.8 lens with all the same camera settings.14mm Rokinon lens: I use this on my EOS M and a 7D that I sometimes take with me. It’s a nice, inexpensive super wide angle lens that rivals the big name lenses in image quality.50mm 1.2 Canon lens: I rarely use this one for night shots, but sometimes I will frame up a peak or something far away with this lens. The 1.2 aperture is almost too bright for Milky Way shots at 2500 ISO.70-200 2.8 IS Canon: Great for taking sunrise photos the next morning.Canon 1.4x and 2.x Teleconverters: Also great for sunrise photos the morning after.Canon 5DMark3Canon 6DCanon EOSM 18-55 & 22mm lenses: I’ve been shooting with Canon gear my entire life, since I was about 15 years old. Any modern camera will work for night images with a decent lens on it. I recommend that you spend the majority of your budget on great lenses, and get a used camera body or a camera body that is few notches down from the top of the line. Lenses nearly last forever, while I find that I change my camera body every few years. I have 2 5Dm2’s that have had the shutters replaced 3 times each from shooting time-lapses.6 LP-E6 batteries: 2 for each camera and 2 extra ones for the next morning of shooting. I keep them in an inside jacket pocket to keep them warm.2 64GB 800x Lexar CF cards: A few extra 32GB cards, just in case I need them.1 64GB SD card with Magic Lantern loaded on it: Critical for shooting time-lapses with the EOS M. It has no cable release and needs Magic Lantern for a lot of functions.DC power adaptors for all cameras with dummy batteries.Goal Zero Sherpa 100 Battery packs for connecting all the time-lapse gear and powering the cameras for a LONG time. I also have a Goal Zero solar panel to recharge when I’m away from power sources.Joby Gorillapod Focus: I use this for lights.Green MeFoto Backpacker tripod: I put my EOS M on this tripod generally.2 Benro Travel-Flat II carbon tripods: Super light! It packs down to 1/2 the size of a normal tripod, and looks like a flute case when traveling. People won’t think you have a camera bag or tripod.2 Canon TC-80n3 cable releases: Cable releases for DSLR cameras.2 Really Right Stuff L brackets for the DSLR’s standard plate for the EOS MNodal Ninja M1/RD16 Panoramic head: For shooting panorama images, the click stops on this are incredibly useful. There is no need to visually check the overlap when shooting panorama. This feature is handy when it’s dark and I need to capture giga-pixel night images.Rocket Blaster: For cleaning lenses and sensorNeewer 160 LED light panel: This is a very cheap LED light panel. Great lighting for photos, light for your campsite, and just a nice flood light to have in the bag.Petzl TacTikka headlamp with green lens: I’ve switched from red to green headlights recently. They seem to preserve night vision better.Leatherman wave: Always carry a multi-tool.F-Stop Tilopa backpack: This is the most incredible camera bag system up on the mountain. I can strap skis or snowboard to the outside of the pack. It holds an incredible amount of gear and the internal camera compartments make it really easy to organize the bag for any set of gear that you need to carry on a particular job or trip. Though I think I need to upgrade this bag to a larger F-Stop Satori soon. I always seem to stuff the maximum amount of gear into a bag no matter what size it is.
About the Author
About the Author
Thomas O’Brien is a landscape and timelapse photographer in Aspen, Colorado. He has had his work published by companies such as ESPN, HBO, Budweiser, Discovery Magazine and more. You can find out more about Thomas on his website, check out his workshops on Muench Workshops, or follow his work on 500px. This article was originally published here, and used with permission.