!!!Kola Peninsula-Northern Lights

by Sergey Semenov and
Sergey Rumyantsev,
members of the [AirPano Team|Geography/About/Consortium/AirPano,_Team] that is a member of the [global-geography Consortium|Geography/About/Consortium]. \\

9 April 2021

with kind permission of [AirPano|http://www.AirPano.com]

The bright glow of the upper layers of the atmosphere visible from the
ground in the winter season is commonly called the northern lights. This
is not entirely true: you can see it near the South Pole, so it is more
correct to say polar lights. However, there are very few land areas in
the southern part of the world, so the best places to admire the
colorful night sky can be found in the Northern Hemisphere.

[{Image src='01_Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='600'}]

The Kola Peninsula is amongst the top 10 most successful spots, and this
is where the new AirPano virtual tour was filmed. It is very difficult
to capture fantastic colors in the sky and sometimes it turns into a
real adventure! This shooting was planned awhile ago, but out of the
whole team, only two directors were able to take part in this
expedition: CEO and technical director, Sergey Semenov and Sergey
Rumyantsev. Both of them are also leading landscape photographers.

Sergey Semenov shared his impressions about this expedition.

Both I and my colleagues from the AirPano team have been hunting for the
polar lights for several years. Most often we do it in March: it is not
as freezing as in January or February, and the equipment can work longer
in the cold. The disadvantage of the journey made in March is the
unstable weather. Even if there is a flash in the sun creating the glow
of the atmospheric layers, the sky can be covered with clouds, and then
the filming does not make sense. To avoid this, we monitor the weather
in advance, being ready to start at any moment. Under favorable
conditions, we immediately take off, leaving for a couple of days.
Therefore, I call this activity "hunting."

[{Image src='02_Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='600'}]

The closest available and inexpensive destination for us is Murmansk.
The flight takes only 2.5 hours, and if the forecast is good, you can
buy a ticket in the evening and stand at the shooting point the next
day. The fact is that the most accurate weather forecast for this region
is Norwegian: it gives one hundred percent hourly accuracy for a day
ahead! And the polar lights tracking software that I personally use is
Aurora Pro; it also sends notifications about the approaching flash and
the power it will have.

[{Image src='03__Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='675'}]

For warm countries, we often use Sony equipment, but shooting in the
north is specific. According to many years of equipment testing and
optimizations, we opted for a so-called "Gorynych": a specially designed
tripod head on which Nikon D810 cameras are attached. They are
characterized by high resolution combined with excellent frost
resistance.

[{Image src='04_Kola.jpg' caption='Filming northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='593'}]

This time we also decided to try a "newbie": the Insta360 TITAN camera.
The tests run in Moscow at a temperature of -25 ° C showed an excellent
result: more than 1000 frames!

Thus, we flew to Murmansk, rented a car and drove west, to the place
with several winding rivers and photogenic "marshmallows" on stones and
snow-drifted riverbanks. We learned about these picturesque spots from a
photo guide based in the Kola Peninsula, Sergey Korolev. Perhaps, he has
the best photographs of these places that I have ever seen! If you want
to take some pictures there, contact him!

[{Image src='05_Kola.jpg' caption='Marshmallows on the river\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='600'}]

Having quickly accommodated at the camp, we changed into our "snow"
clothes and went on reconnaissance before dark to find a suitable site
for placing cameras. The main problem with panoramic time-lapses is the
very long time for shooting: it takes about two hours to make a
30-second final video. It is also very important that no flashlights,
other photographers, passing cars and other objects should enter the
frame - and not just at one point, but everywhere around the camera.
During the shooting, it stands alone in the forest and we, in order not
to spoil the picture, either hide in the car or go to other spots.
Besides, we need to calculate, or rather even guess, the time of the
flash. After all, if it has started when the camera is not shooting,
then the result will be only a small piece for 2-3 seconds in the final
video. So, in this genre, it's especially important to plan everything
in advance!

[{Image src='06_Kola.jpg' caption='Sunset on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='600'}]

And even despite such careful preparation, surprises can await at every
corner. It happened this time, too. Having arrived at the first point, I
noticed an interesting piece of frost that turned into an ice "bridge"
across the river with lace edges and figured icicles. I went to the
middle of it, got down on my knees to take a close up of this beauty,
but at that moment the ice broke off, and I dived into the water like a
swimmer from the side of the pool!

[{Image src='07_Kola.jpg' caption='Filming northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='599'}]

The water was only knee-deep, but I had a very expensive camera in my
hand, which in no case could get wet, so I took the heat and managed to
save the camera. When my colleague Sergey Rumyantsev heard me crying for
help, he saw a funny picture: I was lying on my back in the river, the
water was flowing into my collar, into my boots, into my ears, while two
hands with a camera and a phone proudly rose above its surface!

Then we went to the camp where I changed my clothes and hung up my
clothes to dry: everything from a beanie to underwear was wet. Finally,
we went on a "combat" shooting in the night. The moral is: even on short
trips, make sure to have two sets of winter clothes!

We arrived at the shooting point at about 9 pm: it was not yet
completely dark, but we could already see the first greenish flashes in
the sky. The dense clouds scared us a little, but an hour later they
dissolved. We set up cameras and got ready for the show!

Having started in the form of a small greenish arch near the horizon,
the radiance burst into large, beautiful stripes. Then they began to
wriggle, and purple feathers appeared on them, which literally ran along
the winding trail of the radiance. It twisted into rings, disappeared in
one place and appeared in another: both near the horizon and directly
overhead. Finally, a bizarre green ornament filled the entire sky. It
was amazing: perhaps it was one of the strongest auroras I have ever
seen!

[{Image src='08_Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='506'}]

At about midnight, after the first flash, we changed the batteries on
the cameras, made sure that the recording was successful, and "went" on
hold. The forecast said that it should shine all night. We waited until
there was another little shining, and then a pause again ... Other
photographers that we met on the same river, travelled around the Kola
peninsula for the second week and never saw any lights. They decided to
end at this point, but we did not give up. And at about four in the
morning, another flash came: it was a little weaker than the first but
still magnificent and spectacular.

[{Image src='09_Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='599'}]

Satisfied and exhausted, we returned to the camp and went to bed at
about 6 am, with the first rays of the sun. At this, our main task was
completed, and we were about to go home, but no such luck! The north did
not let us go. Tickets from Murmansk to Moscow were sold out!

Well, we had to stay one more night and that prompted us to explore new
places. Unfortunately, we did not have snowshoes and we went to the
virgin lands, just with our trousers over the boots. We do not recommend
following this example: the snow was either knee- or waist-deep, and our
movement can be compared to partisan crawls mixed with ballet steps and
panda waddle!

[{Image src='10_Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='600'}]

Finally, we crawled to a small cape with dumpy Karelian pines on a
frozen lake, which we first saw from the road. Here we set up cameras
and filmed the sunset landscape, as well as the very beginning of the
aurora, its first appearance in the sky. As the forecast predicted, it
was weaker than the day before, but we completed the filming and after
midnight moved to the car dreaming of getting warm as soon as possible
and going to sleep. But no such luck, again! The north continued to hold
us, making another attempt. This time the keys were in the ignition and
the car itself was locked!

Just imagine: it was freezing at -10 ° C, there were 30 kilometers to
the nearest settlement and no passing cars on Monday at 1 am. After the
first ten shocking minutes, Sergey Rumyantsev remembered that the lock
on the tailgate was unstable: sometimes it closed, sometimes not. And
with the help of the mailbox key, which luckily was found in his pocket,
as well as with a methodical tapping on the lid, a miracle happened: the
trunk swung open! Well, then it was a mere formality: it was a
hatchback, so we easily opened the rest of the doors and in half an hour
we were at the campsite. So if your car got closed, call the AirPano
team!

The next morning, we got up early to get to the airport without
incident, return the rental car and leave for Moscow. The north finally
gave up and let us go. Even though over the past three days we slept
only three times for 5 hours, we did an excellent job there!

[{Image src='11_Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='599'}]

I will add some information about photographic details. The moon was
shining very brightly, but that's what they were counting on. For 360 °
cameras with their view in all directions, the evenly spread
illumination of the scene is very important. When the sky is bright with
colors, the ground and foreground are usually very dark but the moon
helped us here: it illuminated the snow and trees well. Moreover: it
made it possible to shoot at relatively short, for night photography,
exposures (4-5 seconds). This way the radiance turned out to be more
textured, the shooting time was reduced without prejudice to the number
of frames, and it was possible to shoot longer on one battery charge.

And in addition, thanks to the bright moon and bright lights, we were
able to shoot at ISO1600 and even at ISO800!

[{Image src='12_Kola.jpg' caption='Northern lights on the Kola Peninsula\\© [AirPano|https://www.AirPano.com]' alt='' width='900' popup='false' height='596'}]

\\ \\
[17 panoramas of Kola Peninsula-Northern Lights|Geography/Asia/Russia/Pictures/Kola_peninsula]

[{SET customtitle='Kola Peninsula-Northern Lights (AP)'}]












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