Night Light of the North Coast: Camping in the King Range
Night Lights of the North Coast
Camping in the King Range
by David Wilson
The Fall Equinox of September 21, 2017 found me camping beneath the stars on Paradise Ridge in Southern Humboldt’s King Range, a BLM-managed area of our beautiful and famous Lost Coast. Friends I’ve known since childhood had invited me out to join them for a night of stargazing and Milky Way photography in one of their huge glamping tents from their Wayward Glamping business. As we set up our camp, early clouds dampened my hopes for clear skies, but by nightfall, the curtains had pulled apart to reveal the celestial show.
The view from Paradise Ridge is spectacular. To the west, it overlooks the Pacific Ocean north of Shelter Cove and south of Kings Peak which is the highest point in the range at 4091 feet. To the east of the ridge, the view includes much of the South Fork of the Eel River’s watershed and far beyond to the dim horizon.
Because it is so remote, the King Range offers some of Humboldt’s darkest skies, which is perfect for astrophotography and stargazing.
As usual in my night photography, these photographs were taken with the light sensitivity (ISO) set extremely high, the lens opened wide, and a long exposure of nearly 30 seconds. With those settings, the camera saw the dimmest of light far brighter than my eye could. I couldn’t see as many stars with my naked eye, nor quite as much detail in the Milky Way. The tent was illuminated with the tiniest of lights, I think it was a single candle. It hardly made the canvas glow. Yet look how well the camera picked it all up. My camera, open fairly wide for 30 seconds at high ISO, saw the candlelight brightly, picked out the faintest stars, and brought forth the Milky Way’s detail. Ahh, photography.
If you were to try this yourself, make sure you either have a tripod or a sturdy and secure surface to support your camera. Set it to manual focus and focus near infinity. Put it on manual exposure, open the aperture wide, and set your shutter speed to 20-30 seconds. Set the ISO to the highest. Take the picture and examine it on the camera LCD screen for exposure. Zoom in to check focus. Make necessary adjustments and shoot again. Good luck and have fun!
To see previous entries of “Night Lights of the North Coast,” click on my name above the article. If you’d like to keep abreast of my most current photography or peer into its past, you can follow me on Instagram at @david_wilson_mfx . I update my website mindscapefx.com less frequently.
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Incredible picture.
I like it. I like it a lot.
Great Pics! That Wayward Glamping set up sure looks awesome as well.
Stunning ✨
You should put your work on some postcards, or blown them up and frame them, very nice!
Incredible this definitely has to be one of Humboldt County’s crown jewls were else is it possible to take such a incredible picture of the Milky Way it’s amazing how the stars in the universe line up just right some times.
Everyone, thank you very much for your comments. I love reading what you have to say, and I appreciate your thoughts.
I really enjoy doing this weekly thing here at RHBB!
I would love to do just that, put up a tent and spend a night under the stars. Spectacular
I would love to do just that, put up a tent and spend a night under the stars. Spectacular, adventurous
Thank you , I really enjoy the pictures & the writing ✨ The writing gives me an opportunity to see from your point of view & for a few moments I’m whisked away to a night under the stars ✨ Thats what great writing & photography does!!
Amazing photos! Thanks!