
One common refrain you might notice here on Weekly Fifty is that many of the shots I take involve a degree of serendipity: I encounter a photo opportunity while out walking around on campus or other such relatively benign activity. I rarely have something specific in mind, and I’m often just as surprised by the results as you, the reader, might be. This picture, though, is kind of the opposite. It required careful planning as well as timing (though one could argue that’s just two ways of saying the same thing) and also something entirely beyond my control: clear skies. Thankfully, everything came together just fine and the result is the shot you see here, along with a video of the three-hour time lapse condensed down to 11 seconds.
The setup here is surprisingly simple: I captured this scene very early in the morning on March 14, 2025, with my GoPro Hero 12 attached to a tripod in my own back yard. About a month earlier I heard that there would be a lunar eclipse and used the SkyGuide app (which I purchased about a decade ago) to figure out if I would even be able to see it from where we lived. Once I got the answer (a resounding yes) I thought about asking my neighbor if I could put my camera and tripod in his field to get a good clear shot, but the more I pondered the possibility the more I realized I could use the trees in our yard to my advantage. They would provide much-needed context, allowing you, the viewer, to get a sense of where the eclipse is and where you might be positioned if you saw it happen. The treetops visible on the edges of the frame give the sense that you are standing in a clearing with your head tipped upwards to watch the scene unfold, which is pretty much exactly how my GoPro was situated behind our house.
I used the Star Trails preset built in to the GoPro and set a timer for it to start at 12:30am, knowing that totality would be about 90 minutes later. Since the battery lasts roughly three hours on this kind of time lapse, I thought it would capture the entire eclipse from start to finish as the moon made its way through the earth’s shadow–and that’s exactly what ended up happening. I held my iPhone up next to the GoPro with SkyGuide open so I would know exactly where to aim the lens, and then I set the timer and went to bed.
One thing I have learned when taking Star Trails shots like this one is that sometimes they work, and sometimes they just don’t. You can plan everything just right but be stymied by bad weather, a full moon, passing clouds, or a number of unexpected issues. This time, though, everything just worked and worked beautifully. I still can’t quite believe how well the final photo turned out, especially because I won’t even have the chance to do this for a year since that’s when the next lunar eclipse will happen. And who knows, maybe I’ll have more ideas to try for capturing a picture of it by then :)