Sundown

Shakey Air returned to the skies last night. I hadn’t looked at my drone for over a month and it was sulking on top of the refrigerator, where all drones live in our house. I had been busy working on a new project, one that’s taking up just about all of my time of late. I am not sure how I came upon this idea, but it is one of those things that falls in line with my interest in photography. I remembered long ago, getting a telescope from my brother-in-law in trade for some other trinket, I guess, and that telescope brought to mind that I could lift my eyes to the heavens and view what God has created and is still mystifying scientists and astronomers to this day.

I retrieved my telescope from its resting place, brushed the dust off of it and began to contemplate what it would take to point it at the sky with a camera attached. One thing led to another, and next thing you know I’ve got electronic parts spread all over my desk with the hopes of automating the tracking of the telescope as it pans across the sky.

I have been looking around to see how to accomplish this little task on the internet, and what I have found has surprised me. The sources of information for my project pretty much dried up around 2017. These days, the guys that have done this little task, post a picture of the creation, exclaim its wonders and how cool they are for building it, and that’s it. 2018 seems to be a watershed for this change in people and the internet.

So, the drone got ignored, and if we are being frank here, Minnesota sunrises and sunsets have not quite lived up to what I witnessed in Kansas. I took a break from my puttering around with micro electronics and looked at the cloud forecast for the coming evening. It looked sparse, but I was tired of the whining that was coming from the top of the Fridge, and waited for sundown. I also stuck my Pi camera out the window to the East and told it to record the sundown. Flying the drone was easy, like it should be. I told it to lift off and then brought the drone straight up to about 200 feet and started taking images and video. What I saw was not great, but you work with what you have. The fact that with ALS, I can still fly a drone and take images of God’s creation, the glory goes to the Lord. As should everything that we do. “Give unto the LORD the glory due to His name; Worship the LORD in the beauty of holiness” (Psalm 29:2)

What we witness in the world around us and the sky above and including us, was made for God’s glory. Isaiah 43:7 “everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made.” Be aware of this as you see a beautiful sunrise or something you see on the internet, like what I am offering here. Give He who created you, the glory due to Him.

There were clouds and even a little color…


Here is a panorama, the West is on the left for those of you directionally impaired types, the East is on the right.

This is what my Pi camera saw. Close, but not quite a good sunset.

Here the drone is landing and being a very well behaved flying machine.

Since the Pi camera spent the night outside, I let it know it should do the sunrise, and it did.

This was taken the night of July 27th to the morning of the 28th. Stars marching across the sky. More like little pin pricks of white on a black background. We tried and we failed and will do better next time.

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