Posts Tagged ‘Milky Way’
In search of stars

I have strong memories of lying down on the rooftop of my grandmother’s house in the outskirts of Kolkata and looking up at the stars. I must have been six or eight then and star gazing used to feel like a vacation treat. Where we lived, Delhi, the apartment building rooftops didn’t afford the intimacy needed for this quiet sport. And the sky above my grandmother’s house, away from city lights, showed up with a hundred times more stars.
Those starry skies helped develop my love for physics. I loved projects like SETI. I devoured space odysseys. It felt great to be part of the universe – irrespective of what I did or not do, the universe would carry on. I read a book where a space adventurer spends an entire lifetime on a space mission without finding a single life form. I read another book where the people on the planet live with two suns and permanent daytime – never seeing another star. Looking, reading and thinking about stars gave me goosebumps. Then I got busy looking at the computer screen, kindle screen, TV screen, … and decades went by. And with time, I saw fewer and fewer stars.
Then, a few years ago, my significant other took me to Joshua Tree National Park to celebrate the completion of 5 decades in this universe. I was born around the New Year and there are only a few parks in California where winter is dry enough for a ramble. On what had then felt like a whim, my partner borrowed a wide angle camera commonly used in astrophotography and we spent a couple of cold nights in the park, shooting stars. He did the shooting and I looked out for shooting stars. I also kept up the supply of hot tea. Afterwards, the shots got stacked and I had the first look of our own star trails (link). That made for the best birthday present ever. We didn’t know it then, but we had chanced upon a new moon in a cloud free Bortle Scale 2 sky. And that beginner’s luck switched something for my partner, a desire to lean into astrophotography.
Since that trip, we have happened to be under dark skies twice. First was Anza Borrego (link) where we glimpsed the Pleiades star cluster in between the cloud laden winter sky. Second was Alturas (link) where the full moon brightened up the sky all through the night. Last weekend proved the next significant step up in our star gazing luck. I say luck because one always needs luck. But after Alturas, we got serious with our dark sky vacation planning. We wanted a chance to shoot the Milky Way and that means summer months. We chose Pinnacles National Park, our closest dark sky at Bortle Scale 3-4, checked the moon phase and reserved a campsite.
We left home after work on Friday. By the time we got to the campsite, electric tent (#80), it was time to make dinner and prepare ourselves for the night ahead. The Night Sky app gave us the confidence that we could park our gear right outside the tent and still be able to see large swathes of the Milky Way. After some initial hiccups aligning the tracker to the North Star, we settled into the sky watching rituals. The #80 is close to the campground entrance, close to the toilets, close to the Highway and that meant constant comings and goings of fellow campers. We were blinded several dozen times. A large group of friends had gathered near us and were shouting boisterously by the fire. But even with all that light-filled disturbance that had us swearing like Captain Haddock, we knew we were going to get pretty images of the Milky Way.

To leave only footprints behind while rafting through Grand Canyon
Over the years, I have flown in a small aircraft over Grand Canyon, taken a helicopter tour, hiked parts of the canyon, driven through parts of it, stayed nights there, done some touristy things, and rafted through the white water rapids of Colorado river. It is the last I want to share with you today.
Two of us had started at the South Rim main visitor’s complex at 5:00 a.m.. Six hours, 9 miles and 5000 ft descent later, we had joined our rafting group. We had hiked before, rafted before but it was our first camping experience. We were looking forward to eight days in the Canyon. Our group consisted of six raft boats with a guide each and about 6 people to a raft. All except our raft. Our raft was thinly populated – us, our river guide and a lot of camping gear. Little did we know then.
