Saturday was a dog day for me in Alaska. When my friend Brandon and I arrived at noon to Black Spruce Dogsledding the dogs greeted us with baying and loud voices. Or mission for the day :do some mushing and then shoot some night sequences of the dogs and mushing for an upcoming video.
My confidence was much higher from the last time I had been mushing. As my six dog team took off the same adrenaline rush hit me, but my newly acquired skills reigned the excited dogs to a more reasonable pace. My heel weighed on the drag a bit to control the sled speed, and my toe sat on the runner. The stance allows stability around turns and maintains control on the sled during downhills, it is a very useful position! As we headed into a north wind the -40 below windchills were exacerbated by the movement of the dogs. Any bare skin was out of the question! I pulled up my facemask over the tip of my nose and adjusted my ski goggles. Once encased inside of my cocoon I stayed very warm, in fact, my hands broke a sweat due to the activity!
Of course the temperatures were very limiting for shooting, but I do have some stills of the day which capture the dogs and some of the cold!





We settled into the house after our 9 mile mush and warmed up with some hot supper, by the time we stepped outside again at 8PM, magic was beginning to happen in the sky. A faint rivlet of aurora was growing, and by 10:15 had grown to a flowing stream which then topped its banks! Ribbons of pink, green, and purple aurora flowed and dashed across the sky. The show lasted for 15 minutes, and then mysteriously faded away. Sometimes seeing the best aurora is just about being at the right place at the right time. The images I captured that night are easily some of the most colorful and sharp to date! What a show!
Part of what I have to offer today is footage shot with Brandon’s Sony A7S. This camera can almost literally see in the dark. Although the footage is not of the highest quality possible (for that check out Ronn Murray’s incredible work!), I couldn’t be MORE happy to catch some real-time auroras for you! These have been sped up to make it a bit more interesting to watch (since we didn’t catch the show at the most epic point), but allows you to see all of the movements, rather than what you miss in the timelapse!
Last, but not least, I have a new photo project! You can check it out at the 2015 Photo Project!




The video makes it easy to see how one can become so entranced with the ever-changing aurora, so much so that you are willing to spend nights out in the cold to capture it on “film”. Thanks to Brandon for the use of his photog equipment! Beautiful images, Ian. Another WOW:)
Lol, had to look up Ianesque because I thought it was Lanesque… didn’t find a definition. I get it now.
Your group of pups shot made me laugh…the Ianesque frozen whiskers on the lead dog….and especially the “come-on-let’s-get-going” howl of his teammate. Not sure if there are dogs anywhere more vocal/enthusiastic than sled dogs!
Yup! That picture pretty much sums up what it is to be a sled dog!
Lol, had to look up ianesque… didn’t find a definition. I get it now.
Love those dogs! You caught one howling. I do believe that the aurora colors are the most vivid varied yet.
The picture of the dogs and the howler pretty much sums up the sled dog mentality and persona – get excited and make lots of noise! 🙂
I love the red bits ! Crazy !
Yeah! They were beautiful! I think just about every color of the aurora showed itself that night. Pretty amazing!