Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta

The Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta takes place every October, the first full week of the month (Saturday of one weekend through Sunday the next). I’ve now had time to sort through the shots I took from this year’s Fiesta, so I thought it’d be a good time to write down some thoughts / advice on how to photograph the event. I’ll talk about logistics in this post, and follow up in a few days with some gear recommendations.

Happy day!

According to a number of estimates, the Fiesta is the most photographed single event on the planet. And it’s easy to see why — admission is open and reasonably priced, you’ve got lots of color to work with, skies are usually blue. And with the advent of the internet, you can get your ticket(s) online in advance. Piece of cake.

But all this comes with one little complication — the Fiesta can be a crowded place.

A bit cozy!

To put it in perspective — the city of Albuquerque, New Mexico has a population of a bit over 500,000. The last estimate I saw pegs the visitor count for this year’s Fiesta at about 750,000. I suspect this double- and triple-counts people that come to town and attend multiple days’ launches. But still, on weekend days you’re out on a field with well over 100,000 other pedestrians.

Did I mention that if you don’t have any in-town relatives, you need to line up a hotel room well in advance for this?

State spirit

Anyway, the crowd is friendly, but it’s no place for the claustrophobic. Since you’ll be viewing the balloons from the same field they’re launching from (on weekend mornings, about 600 balloons launch in multiple waves as part of “mass ascensions”), you need to be ready to do some walking — if only to get out of the way of the next wave of balloons as they are brought in by trailer.

Also, as you might imagine, getting 100,000+ people in and out of a single large field is no mean feat. There are only so many ways you can get to the park where the Fiesta launches — so driving definitely isn’t recommended. Instead, when you buy your ticket(s), get the kind that include a shuttle-bus ride. Here, you’ll just need to drag your tail and your gear down to a large parking lot (your choice of six) early in the morning — the bus driver will take it from there.

And by “early,” I mean before 5:30 am — the buses have to take a circuitous route to the field (to get around all the people in cars), and that means that even with every bus in town on the job, the first wave of buses in will be on the road by 5:30 — and tied up in traffic until 6:30 or so. Show up too late, and you might not get a seat on the second wave of busses — and the last bus in leaves at 7:00.

Bus route

Here’s the GPS track of our bus ride one day. We rode in from the Hoffmantown lot (parking for a local mega-church), and as you can see, minimizing drive time isn’t high on the priority list. It’s just the only way to dodge the log jam caused by thousands of cars trying to take the shortest route in from the interstate.

On the bright side, since this is a New Mexico event, when you get to the Fiesta grounds at an ungodly hour of the morning, you’ve got a very tasty breakfast burrito waiting for you…

Sacré Coeur – en noir

If you’ve been following this blog for long, you may remember that I do most of my image post-processing in Aperture on a Mac. Well, Apple just released an update to Aperture (containing a slew of needed bug fixes), so I’m taking the opportunity to dig back in my archives to revisit some old shots that were ready for a second chance.

Sacré Coeur - en noir

This one was taken looking up the steps east of the Basilica. I think the B/W treatment gives it a noir film feel…

The Sentinel

Seen (and heard) in the parking lot of the Many Glaciers Hotel in Glacier National Park, Montana:

The Sentinel

This little guy was putting on quite the territorial display for us — making all sorts of noise to let us know that this was *HIS* parking lot. Of course, he chickened out when I got within about 20 feet of him, so I had to use a little focal length to get a decent shot of him.

Getting to Delicate Arch

So on our recent trip to Arches National Park, I definitely wanted to revisit Delicate Arch. Sure, it’s a “marquis” attraction, so you generally have to deal with crowds. Oh, and you’ve got to take a long, dry hike to get to the arch from the trailhead parking lot.

But it’d been 10 years since I’d seen it, and now that I have some decent camera gear I thought I ought to do it justice, photographically. Oh, and I’d heard it’s particularly photogenic at sunset — so after the obligatory 90 minute hike, I did get this nice shot:

Delicate Arch at sundown

When I previously hiked out to see Delicate Arch, we made the mistake of going in the middle of the day, and compounded our mistake by not taking water. This time I discovered the hike’s much more pleasant in the late afternoon, and having a quart or two of water per person is a great idea.

Here’s a shot of part of the trail, taken fairly early (i.e., near the trailhead) — if you look closely at the big slab of rock (on the left side of the image, about mid-way up), you’ll see some little dots that are hikers:

2010-09-04 2010.09.04 Delicate Arch 11

Of course, I wasn’t alone when I got to the arch — I had a few “neighbors:”

Delicate Arch: your new friends

So you need to be patient to get the shot you want — lots of folks want to pose for pictures standing under the arch. Even then, you might need to use a little Photoshop magic to remove stray people from the shot you like best. Oh, and since you’re taking sunset shots, you’ll want a flashlight or head lamp if you linger very long after the Sun’s gone.

But of course, you already knew that, right?

Chalk it up to art

Seen at the 1st annual “Chalk it up to Education” chalk art festival; Littleton, Colorado.

Chalk it up to art

I’m a bit rushed due to some off-line commitments, but I’ll follow this image with some others that actually have a story attached. Soon now…

Mesa Arch sunrise

So we recently returned home from an extended weekend trip to Moab, Utah and the surrounding area. If you’re unfamiliar with the neighborhood, “surroundings” in this case means Arches and Canyonlands National Parks.

Anyway, it’s been aeons since we last visited Moab — well before I had any decent digital camera gear, so I did my now-usual photographic research before we went. Turns out that one of the “must see” things in the area is sunrise at Mesa Arch in Canyonlands.

So here’s my first go at the sight (I’m still tweaking levels to make it look less-obviously HDRed):

Mesa Arch sunrise

In retrospect, it’s kind of funny how most images of this particular sunrise location focus heavily on the arch — when, from my perspective at least, the arch is best used as a nice frame for the incredibly layered scenery on the other side of it.

By the way, the layers come courtesy of local coal-fired power plants. Coal exhaust haze: lousy for lungs, great for sunrise vistas.

Anyway, from the looks of this, you can’t really tell just how small the arch is. Perhaps this helps:

2010-09-06 2010.09.06 Canyonlands sunrise crowd 7

Since the word is out about this arch, and there isn’t much room to set up in, you’re well advised to get there early (at least 45 minutes before sunrise) if you want a shot exactly at sunrise. At least, if you want to shoot over on the left side. Right side was less crowded the morning I went:

2010-09-06 2010.09.06 Canyonlands sunrise crowd 6

Go figure — the view’s just about as good from the less-crowded right side, too. FWIW, the tripod with the black and red leg padding (in line with the guy in white here) is my rig, firing away with an interval timer.

I scouted out the arch the day before in daylight and marked the parking lot on my GPS navigator — makes life a lot easier in the morning, when you’re driving in the dark with no visual cues. Oh, and bring a spelunker’s flashlight (the kind on an elastic band for your head) — makes it much easier to find the trail to the arch in the dark.