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Well, that was a rather unsuccessful attempt to photograph lightning during the storm that just passed directly overhead (with one *very* bright and loud strike about half a mile away). There were a few strikes that the digital camera on long exposure could have caught, except they occurred between photos. And then it ran out of batteries, and I discovered that the spare set were also flat.
So I turned to the film SLR, at which point the thunderstorm died down and left me with several exposures of nothingness. There *might* be one on there if my reflexes were fast enough... but I won't know until I develop the film (which is half the fun of using film).
The storm's still rumbling on nearly an hour after it started, but at a low enough rate that I'll just waste the film if I keep going with the 30-second exposure approach.
So I turned to the film SLR, at which point the thunderstorm died down and left me with several exposures of nothingness. There *might* be one on there if my reflexes were fast enough... but I won't know until I develop the film (which is half the fun of using film).
The storm's still rumbling on nearly an hour after it started, but at a low enough rate that I'll just waste the film if I keep going with the 30-second exposure approach.
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I did do some looking online (after attempting to take a couple of photos with the film SLR by watching for a strike and then taking the photo - if I'm really lucky, I might have managed one that way) and the super-secret trick to photographing lightning is apparently just to use bulb mode, letting go of the shutter immediately after a strike. Of course, by the time I tried to do that the storm had disappeared northwards and left me with several 30-second photos of what will probably be black sky.
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These have been my successes: http://www.flickr.com/photos/spacelama/tags/lightning (the 4th one, despite landing behind the mountains about 15km away, was absolutely blinding (a good fraction of daylight, given that the exposure is effectively fractions of a second and the mountains were lit up in the photo. If I could have predicted the necessary f-ratio before to stop it down a substantial fraction, it would have been a brilliant, pardon the pun, shot; ooh, wouldn't it be nice to be able to do HDR with lightning)
Now it just makes you insanely mad when trying to do the same thing to capture meteors, which are 100 times rarer during the peak of a shower (which only happens a handful of times per year), and the damn meteor always terminates a degree outside of the field of view, no matter where you're pointing the camera.