Tag Archives: final

Space Shuttle Endeavour Flyover #2

Space Shuttle Endeavour flyover - Moffett Field
Space Shuttle Endeavour flyover – Moffett Field

Space Shuttle Endeavour Flyover #2. NASA/Ames Moffett Field, California. September 21, 2012. © Copyright 2012 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Space Shuttle Endeavour flyover – Moffett Field

This is the second photograph in my sequence showing the Space Shutter Endeavour, mounted atop its transport aircraft, as it did a slow and low flyover of the NASA/Ames Moffett Field facility in the San Francisco Bay Area on September 21, 2012. I posted the first shot yesterday, made as the craft(s) came over the top of the historic Hangar One facility, still approaching my camera position.

This photograph was made a few seconds later, after it had cleared the old hangar and was almost perpendicular to my position and just about as close as it came to me. The slow passage of the lumbering modified 747 carrying the Endeavour was a stunning and beautiful and magical sight. After three hours of waiting in a crowd along the edge of the runway, the first sight of Endeavor approaching from the distance over San Francisco Bay was exciting. Then the approach seemed to accelerate (though I know it didn’t) as the craft passed over the top of the old hangar and emerged in full view very close by. In a moment it was on its departing path, and within another minute or so it was all over.

Because this image from the sequence shows the shuttle the most clearly, I decided to crop a bit differently to eliminate much extraneous material – which here would have been mostly sky. At some point I’d like to make a large print of this or one of the other images. In this one the details of the shuttle (and the transport craft) are extremely clear in the full size image. In fact, I can see the face of one of the people in the cockpit of the 747. He is looking our way, and I swear there is a smile on his face! :-)

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more.
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

Space Shuttle Endeavour Flyover – Moffett Field

Space Shuttle Endeavor flyover - Moffett Field
Space Shuttle Endeavor flyover – Moffett Field

Space Shuttle Endeavour flyover. Moffett Field, California. September 21, 2012. © Copyright 2012 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Space Shuttle Endeavour Flyover – Moffett Field.

This was an exciting moment! The space shuttle Endeavour was on its final “flyover” around California on Friday this week as it made its way toward its new home in a museum in Los Angeles. Since it was scheduled to fly over the NASA/Ames Research Center air field – the old Moffett Field – I decided to be there with camera in hand. Having been warned of big crowds and bad traffic, I was up at 5:20 a.m. in order to catch public transit shortly after 6:00 a.m., and I arrived at the gates to the facility at about 7:30 a.m. The crowds were not too large at that point, though they swelled as that actual event got closer.

Moffett Field is a place with some meaning to people who have lived on the San Francisco Peninsula for some time – especially to those, like me, who were brought up here. I can recall going there with my family on the old “Armed Forces Day” to see the big annual air show, which often featured the Blue Angels. The large dirigible hangars at the base still stand (though one is undergoing renovation), and they have long been landmarks for people traveling along US 101 between Silicon Valley and San Francisco. As I walked out onto the edge of the runway, memories of many past visits to the place came back to me.

Since I arrived at 7:30, I had quite a while to wait before the shuttle and its 747 transport aircraft arrived. I spent a bit of time photographing the crowd, the old “Hangar One,” other airfield facilities, and even the interesting clouds. The flyover was scheduled for 9:30, but reports made it clear that there would be a delay, and we gradually figured out that it might be 10:30 or a bit later. Shortly after 10:30 the cry “there it is!” went up, and far to the left (as we faced the runway) we could see the small shape of the far-off shuttle and its carrier. Perhaps it is due to the size of the combined aircraft, but they seemed to move very slowly. We had been given the expectation that they would fly in front of us along the runway, but as the shuttle approached it became clear that it would actually pass behind us and on the other side of the old hangar. I made a few shots before it passed behind the upper section of the structure, flying surprisingly low, and then continued shooting as it emerged along the top of the hangar, then passed it, and continued on toward the mountains to the south. The whole thing seemed to happen in slow motion, and there was plenty of time to make photographs of the astonishing sight. After many years of seeing shuttles on television and in print, it was stunning to see that actual thing fly by so close. (I had seen one lift-off in Florida some years ago, though from such a great distance that I couldn’t see anything like the detail I could make out here.)

On a photographic note, I shot this whole thing handheld using a full-frame camera with a 100-400mm zoom. Once again the zoom proved itself. Not only did it produce images with enough resolution that I can see the 747 pilot looking out the window at the crowd in the full size version, but it let me adjust focal length as the show flew past – at its closest it was so large that the whole thing did not fit in the frame at 400mm!

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more.
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

Last Light, Mount Conness

Last Light, Mount Conness
Last Light, Mount Conness

Last Light, Mount Conness. Yosemite National Park, California. June 18, 2011. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

The final evening alpenglow illuminates the summit ridge of Mount Conness and the west face of Medlicott Dome in the Yosemite National Park high country.

This will be my final photograph of Mount Conness from the evening of June 18, the day that Tioga Pass Road opened this year and the day of one of the most spectacular Yosemite high country sunsets in recent memory. It will be the final both in the sense that I think I’ve now shared the best of the group of images of this sunset and in the sense that it was literally my final exposure of the evening.

The short back-story is that what started out as a fairly unimpressive evening (at least in the photographic sense) transformed over a short period into something extraordinary as the sun dropped to the horizon west of the Sierra and illuminated the clouds from below, creating rare and very special alpenglow conditions over a wide area of the Sierra. (During the week that followed quite a few people commented on this amazing light, which they had witnessed from locations as distant as Mono Lake on the east side and the Central Valley to the west.)

When I made this photograph the show was coming to an end. At this point the sun had already set a few minutes earlier – the exposure was made around 8:45 p.m. – and the light was low enough to require a six-second exposure. While it may seem like Mount Conness (the tallest peak near the left on the skyline) and other features are receiving direct sunlight, this is actually the remaining post-sunset glow in the western sky.

G Dan Mitchell Photography
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

Last Autumn Sunset of 2008 – Point Lobos

Last Autumn Sunset of 2008 - Point Lobos

Last Autumn Sunset of 2008 – Point Lobos. Point Lobos State Reserve, California. December 20, 2008. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Sunset over the Pacific Ocean at Point Lobos State Reserve on the final evening of autumn 2008.

Sometimes, as hard as you may try to resist, you just have to shoot the sunset.

I was at Point Lobos this afternoon since it was a beautiful, clear day – and rain is coming tomorrow. Earlier I had photographed shore birds and then sea lions, along with the usual assortment of rocks and so forth. Within the past year or so the park’s closing time has been extended until a half hour after sunset, so I wandered up the trail along the coast near the south end of the park. I made some photographs of the rocks around bird island and explored a cove or two, and then after the sun set I saw this amazing reflection on the surface of the water to the west.

This photograph is not in the public domain. It may not be used on websites, blogs, or in any other media without explicit advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

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