The Road North

Ground, Sea or Air. Go somewhere.
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The Road North

Post by Camp Director »

A few years ago a photographer/friend /customer started exploring the feasibility of following the migration of the endangered whooping crane from the nesting ground in south Texas to the summer home in Alberta and Northwest Territories of Canada. The plan was to follow the same route in a airplane, low and slow, to make a continuous aerial photo of the route. The plan was to do this last year but, covid and a closed border got in the way.

Friday the first of April the journey will begin. The photographer is Michael Forsberg (https://www.michaelforsberg.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;). He will be flying with Chris Boyer of Kestrel Aerial Services (https://www.kestrelaerial.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;). I will be providing ground support and camera tech. Mike and I will leave Nebraska on Friday and Chris will leave Bozeman, MT Thursday. We will meet in Rockport, TX to begin the trek north.

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My plan is to post a daily update here time permitting.
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Re: The Road North

Post by Delicate Snowflake »

:lurker

I trust you’re taking a goodly supply of banned camp stickers with you? :nod
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Re: The Road North

Post by Delicate Snowflake »

Camp Director wrote:... follow the same route in a airplane, low and slow, to make a continuous aerial photo...

...I will be providing ground support and camera tech.
Slow in an airplane is still much faster than driving, I imagine.

Will it be a limited distance each day so you on the ground can keep up? Or you'll just rock in to the agreed overnight stop some hours after the plane?

I guess this will become clear to me once we see a day or two of the trip :thumb

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Re: The Road North

Post by Camp Director »

I'm on my way. Here is a link to a SPOT transceiver in the truck.

https://maps.findmespot.com/s/C4ZM" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: The Road North

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Day One was uneventful. We drove from Lincoln to Fort Worth, had a Popeyes chicken sandwich and went to bed. Tomorrow will take us to Rockport, TX where we will meet up with Chris and his airplane. Then, the trip will start to get interesting. Good night.
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Re: The Road North

Post by drlewall »

If I were younger, this might be fun, but as of now, this is way too much excitement for me :gramps

:lol8
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Re: The Road North

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Day Two

The trip south has taken us from Nebraska late winter, early spring to 80 degrees, leaves on the trees and green everywhere.

We left Ft. Worth at about 0800 and headed south to Rockport, TX. Some time along the say we decided that we will not eat at any chain restaurants. So while driving through Hallettsville, TX Mike found a BBQ joint on the internet.

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Owned by a husband/wife team and staffed by their daughter.

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I had a half of a chicken and potato salad. Both excellent.

Then on to Rockport, TX. Here is the view from my room.

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Very close to the water and marina.

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After a couple hours, the plane and pilot arrived at the airport.

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The plane is a 1958 Cessna that the pilot has modified for aerial photography.

After a great meal at a local restaurant, we walked back to the hotel.

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The next couple days will be spent swapping cards in timelapse camera systems we installed last year around Aransas National Wildlife Refuge and doing some aerial photography. Then start the journey north to Ft. Smith, NWT.
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Re: The Road North

Post by drlewall »

But my Ft Smith is a bit further south!

:peepwall

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Re: The Road North

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Day Three

Early morning brought fog and low visibility. I woke up early to watch the sunrise from a long pier close to the hotel. One look out the window and went back to bed. The fog started burning off shortly after sunrise.

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After a quick breakfast we headed to the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge to check on the three timelapse cameras we installed last year. The first on the trip was installed on a observation platform overlooking Mustang Lake and San Antonio Bay.

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It is a popular perch for vultures and other birds.

The second camera is on a elevated walkway close to the observation tower.

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All of the timelapse systems are built around the Nikon D5600 and the TRLcam timelapse controller. Power is provided by a 25 watt solar and stored in a bank of eight supercapacitors. There are no batteries in the system which makes it extremely reliable for rears of use. The intervalometer timing is set by a GPS module on the control board. The GPS data is fed into a microcontroller that calculates the exact sunrise and sunset time for that location. The controller then starts taking pictures one hour before sunrise and stops one hour after sunset. In that first and last hour, four times as many images are captured. So, if the interval is set on one hour, the camera will shoot four images before sunrise and four images after sunset. The interval is set with a series of dipswitches. Very simple and very reliable.

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The third camera is on a windmill tower a few miles from the observation platform.

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Same setup as the other two and working well.

Before leaving the refuge we took a couple side trips down a couple walking paths. It was a great day for wildlife watching.

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About 1600 it cleard up enough for a VFR flight. So, we made our way to the airport to get setup.

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The guys were in the air for about an hour and a half and had a successful trip.
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Re: The Road North

Post by Delicate Snowflake »

Camp Director wrote: All of the timelapse systems are built around the Nikon D5600 and the TRLcam timelapse controller. Power is provided by a 25 watt solar and stored in a bank of eight supercapacitors. There are no batteries in the system which makes it extremely reliable for rears of use. The intervalometer timing is set by a GPS module on the control board. The GPS data is fed into a microcontroller that calculates the exact sunrise and sunset time for that location. The controller then starts taking pictures one hour before sunrise and stops one hour after sunset. In that first and last hour, four times as many images are captured. So, if the interval is set on one hour, the camera will shoot four images before sunrise and four images after sunset. The interval is set with a series of dipswitches. Very simple and very reliable.

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For me, very interesting. I have built timers and camera intervalometers for some of my hobbies, all 4000-series cmos based and never with modules or GPS or that new-fangled stuff. The capacitor bank style of power is new to me - but I was just this month reading about a [quite small] spot-welder kit made with capacitors in 'Silicon Chip' magazine.

Your capacitor board seems to have the DIP switches on the left - so it's a single module style of arrangement, i.e. the control circuitry and capacitor power bank all on the one board?

The plane is cool too. Reminds me of my Uncle's 2 seat Cessna. His day job was Qantas long-haul pilot, and his day-off fun was that little plane. :nod

Keep posting CD :thumb

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Re: The Road North

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The switches set the interval and other options. The GPS, micro and associated component are on the backside of the red board. So, everything is all on one board. I started building intervalometers over ten years ago. The weak part was always the battery. So, the supercapacitors have been a game changer. Plus having everything on one board reduces the number of wires. Simple is better.
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Re: The Road North

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:lurker

Oh, I'm in for this one!
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Re: The Road North

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Day Four

Foggy, windy and a low ceiling. No flying today. :(
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Re: The Road North

Post by Delicate Snowflake »

Camp Director wrote:The switches set the interval and other options. The GPS, micro and associated component are on the backside of the red board. So, everything is all on one board. I started building intervalometers over ten years ago. The weak part was always the battery. So, the supercapacitors have been a game changer. Plus having everything on one board reduces the number of wires. Simple is better.
:Clap
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Re: The Road North

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Day Five

Foggy, windy and a low ceiling. No flying today.

But, we did find a great BBQ joint in Victoria, TX.

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We also rigged a GoPro Hero Max 360 camera to the tail of the plane.

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It should be interesting to see what that can produce.
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Re: The Road North

Post by campfire »

:lurker


:thumb
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Re: The Road North

Post by MrKiwi »

:Clap
Way South of the Border
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Re: The Road North

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Finally a front blew through, lowered the humidity and changed the wind to the north. The pilot and photographer had a great day in the air and accomplished most of the objectives for this area.

After landing we had some really good pizza and called it a day.

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Tomorrow morning we will load up and head north.
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Re: The Road North

Post by Delicate Snowflake »

:lurker
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Re: The Road North

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Day Seven

Finally, a good weather window and we are out of here.

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The aerial camera is in place.

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The plane is fueled up.

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Let's go north.
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