gstark wrote:The frightening thing is that you probably have just a little more than a month to prepare for this; that is not a long lead-in at all.
I'm not starting from scratch though. I've known about this opportunity for months, but it's taken ages to sort out the contract and exact voyage details (the dates shifted slightly just last week before we got the contract finished!).
So I've been doing background planning and thinking for ages. Thus things like my hunt for wide/fast lenses (I'm hoping to have a 24mm/1.4L in my hands by the end of the week).
My wife jokes (?) that I'm a bit OCD: I have a calendar/planner set up in Excel with details of the entire trip, including things like how long each sea leg is, what time we arrive/depart each port, when dawn/dusk and civil/nautical/astro twilight times are, moon phases, and what the times back home will be (need to coordinate phone calls home when in port). On each 11-day voyage up and down the coast we'll stop in ports 66 times (some of which I'll sleep through) so it's a fairly busy schedule, and I need to be able to fit in all my shooting, my photo workshops, my photo processing (including preparing DVDs of material to post off in port), as well as getting the right amount of regular sleep. And be able to keep going with that schedule for 5 weeks (3 back-to-back voyages)! I'm definitely looking forward to the challenge.
And I'm not starting from scratch on gear/etc either. There's very little equipment (warm clothes, etc) that I have to buy: I'm just refining my equipment from the last Antarctic voyage.
BTW, there's a 3-page article "Shots in the Dark" by Tony Page in the Winter 2009 edition of Better Photography magazine. Tony did the voyage as a passenger over Christmas, and I drilled him for details a few months ago.
It is going to be a busy time over the next month, but my main concern is to make sure I've got all my teaching/assessment commitments satisfied before I leave in mid-Nov (last classes are end of October, but usually there'd be things to sign off on in December - I have to get all that sorted before I disappear for the rest of the year). In fact I've just got back after having my swine flu vaccination, so it's non-stop.
photohiker wrote:They say you have to be lucky to see the Aurora on any trip, but we saw it from the taxi on the way to our hotel in Kirkenes and several times on the voyage. Photographing it is another thing of course, especially from a moving boat.
Thus my intended use of a 5DmkII (prob @ ISO 3200) with EF 24mm/1.4L (prob @ f/1.6) for that! I will have a tripod with me if I see the Aurora when I'm on land, although shooting from amongst the streetlights of a town is not one of the shots I have in mind.
Actually, believe it or not I expect the tripod will get a little use on the ship.
Indeed it will be a challenge.
ATJ wrote:Um... there's a member here that recently went to the Antarctic. Perhaps he could provide some advice.
That was polar SUMMER photography.
gstark wrote:We look forward to seeing some wonderful images from this trip, and to hear the great stories that you will be able to share in due course.
I'm trying to get my site set up with a close-to-realtime map of my location and have blog updates every couple of days, and I've got a series of articles prepped to go beforehand talking about things like my travel/gear preparations.