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anyone here residing in alaska, currently or in the past?
like to gawk the northern lights... need some info pls..
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I have seen them twice they are amazing. Not as vivid as you see in the pics and Videos but still spectacular
http://i1193.photobucket.com/albums/...2/DSC_1650.jpg http://i1193.photobucket.com/albums/...2/DSC_1648.jpg http://i1193.photobucket.com/albums/...2/DSC_1647.jpg These were taken in Finland this January |
I kinda wanted to stay in the states because I don't want to hassel with a passport
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You can see them in Alaska too i was just showing you the pics lol.. You need to be somewhere where there is no unnatural light ie streetlamps etc.. and it needs to be a real clear night.. Have a look at Frozen Planet by David Attenbourgh and you see them in the program that was filmed in Alaska i believe
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This would be impossible to plan
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so there are a few rules of thumb....first you need solar activity in the form of solar flares...like the big ones we had last week, second they will have to hit the area (these are actually fairly predictable) but usually not with a lot of notice, think a few days at most. the stronger the solar activity and the more direct the hit the more spectacular the light show. The Northern lights have been seen as far south as Washington DC in periods of unusually high solar activity. 2012 and the first part of 2013 are peak solar activity years so this is a good year to think about it, as for alaska I'd go above the arctic circle in late fall or winter time frame (remember this area in the summer can have 24 hrs of daylight.) Think Point Barrow in Nov/Dec if the solar winds cooperate. |
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as was earlier noted avoid lights, go to an area with no artificial lighting (theres plenty) and if you are trying to photo use a very high iso. the newer DSLRs would be ideal |
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Keep Googling. :2 cents: |
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Michigan...
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Additionally, it would be a horrible trip to fly to the middle of nowhere in Alaska (where you have a high probability of being weathered in) when you can just as easily do it in Sweden or Finland or Russia or Norway or wherever and actually have a real life experience that won't be disappointing no matter what happens. BTW... You also have a better chance of running into a Koala Bear in Melbourne than you do in LA... that doesn't mean its likely to happen ;) |
You can plan a 3 day trip and have an 80% chance of catching a display stay a week and its about a sure thing during certain dates
http://gocalifornia.about.com/od/ak/a/nlights.htm |
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